TheTimes.jpg

 

 

Commemorating the selfless struggle of Reggie Vandeyar

 

Hero's funeral to be on Sunday, 20 September 2015

 

 

RDM News Wire, Times Live, Johannesburg, 17 September, 2015

 

The Ahmed Kathrada Foundation offered its condolences to the family and
friends of struggle veteran, Reggie Vandeyar (84), who passed away on
Thursday.

 

The struggle stalwart was amongst the first Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK)
operatives to be jailed on Robben Island, along with Shirish Nanabhai and
Indres Naidoo. They remained incarcerated on the island for 10 years.

 

Vandeyar, described as a "rank and file revolutionary", was a member of the
Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC), the South African Communist Party (SACP),
the African National Congress (ANC) and MK.

 

In recent years, he received the National Order of Mendi for Bravery (in
silver) "for his remarkable bravery during the struggle against apartheid
and for striving for a free and democratic South Africa".

 

The foundation's director, Neeshan Balton, said that Vandeyar's legacy was
something that young people needed to learn about.

 

"Reggie came from an extremely poor background and was employed as a waiter.
He continued his political work throughout his life without asking for
recognition, or any reward for his contribution."

 

Balton said that he was concerned around media reports on statements
allegedly made by the ANC Youth League secretary-general, Njabulo Nzuza,
that struggle activists fought to share the same toilets and drink the same
whisky as whites.

 

"If the media reports are indeed true, we would like the ANCYL to measure up
this assertion against the life of Comrade Reggie Vandeyar. I think they
will find that they are sorely mistaken.

 

"We would advise the ANCYL to read about the lives of many of our liberation
heroes, before underplaying the contribution of these veterans."

 

Speaking from his Johannesburg home, struggle stalwart Ahmed Kathrada
praised Vandeyar's lifelong dedication to the struggle. Vandeyar had become
politically active in the SACP at the age of 14.

 

"Reggie is one of those comrades who became involved in politics when he was
young and was active before, during and after imprisonment. I had a close
political relationship, and personal friendship, with him and his family.

 

"My partner, Barbara Hogan, and I would like to extend our condolences to
Reggie's wife, Assoo, his family and friends. Our thoughts and prayers are
with them during this difficult time."

 

His sentiments were echoed by Laloo Chiba, who served with Vandeyar in MK.

 

"It is with a deep sense of shock that I learnt of the unexpected and tragic
death this morning of comrade Reggie. These are indeed extremely difficult
times for the family, but I am confident, that they have the courage to rise
above this sad occasion and cross these troubled waters with courage, grace
and dignity."

 

Chiba also shared his most vivid memory of Vandeyar, recalling the night of
16th December 1961, when MK was launched.

 

"A four person group of saboteurs, headed by Comrade Wolfie Kodesh, and
including Reggie, Paul Joseph and myself, successfully carried out three
acts of sabotage. They were directed against the white section of the post
office in Fordsburg, the Bantu Commissioner's Office in Newtown and the Pass
Offices in Central Johannesburg."

 

But it is Nanabhai, who was arrested with Vandeyar on April 17 1963, who
provided an account of his colleague's torture in detention.

 

While targeting a railway signal site near Riverlea, the pair, together with
Indres Naidoo, were given up by a fellow unit member, Gammat Jardien.

 

"I met Reggie in 1955 during the Congress of the People. It was him who
approached me later to join MK," says Nanabhai.

 

"We were tortured following our arrest - beaten up. Reggie could not walk
properly after the torture and his arm was broken. He suffered with this
problem throughout his prison years and thereafter. His bone grew
incorrectly, and he had difficulty lifting up things."

 

Vandeyar had several years ago himself described the torture inflicted upon
him by an apartheid police officer: "He sat on my back and started twisting
my arm and I could hear the crunch of my muscles tearing on my shoulders. I
couldn't bear it.The beatings (in detention) didn't seem like an overnight
thing; it seemed like days of torture; you don't know day from night, you
don't know hour from hour."

 

After being sentenced, Vandeyar and his comrades were transferred from
Leeukop Prison to Robben Island. While the conditions on the island were
bleak, Nanabhai said that it was the food that really troubled Vandeyar.
"Reggie was a top chef, so he knew what good food was. He couldn't take
prison food."

 

Following his release from prison, Vandeyar was served with a five year
banning order.

 

"But on a number of occasions, we would meet clandestinely," said Nanabhai.

 

Despite the personal and political difficulties following his release,
Vandeyar was central to regrouping activists, laying the groundwork for
anti-apartheid action throughout the 1980s. He was amongst a group of
islanders released from prison that rebuilt the democratic movement in South
Africa, including the ANC underground structures.

 

After the expiry of his second five-year banning order, he was elected as
one of the vice-presidents of the TIC.

 

He was later part of the historic meeting between the Transvaal and Natal
Indian Congresses and the banned ANC leadership in Lusaka.

 

Vandeyar is survived by his wife, Assoo, and children, Karuna and Sushila.
He will be laid to rest on Sunday, September 20. Details around the funeral
are yet to be finalised.

 

RDM News Wire.

 

 

From:
http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/2015/09/17/Commemorating-the-selfless-strug
gle-of-Reggie-Vandeyar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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