Trevor Manuel: anti-apartheid activist to government minister

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dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-27T13:02:14Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-27T13:02:14Z
dc.date.issued 2023-02-27 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/19949
dc.description.abstract During the apartheid era, Trevor Andrew Manuel took on a variety of roles in the antiapartheid movement inside the country, beginning while he was at school in the mid-1970s and picking up pace in the 1980s, culminating in his ascension to the leadership of the liberation movement. The experiences he gained from these roles eventually propelled him into the economic elite and the position of government minister in the new democracy, despite a modest working-class background and a relatively limited tertiary education. The decision at an early age to participate in organisations defying apartheid and the range of activities he engaged in subsequently are evidence of a significant contribution to the quest for social justice in this country. Manuel was born in the Cape Town coloured suburb, Kensington, on 31 January 1956. His father, Abraham Manuel, worked for the Cape Town City Council, and his mother, Euphemia 'Philma' Manuel (nee van Sohnen), was a garment worker. The family lived in a threebedroomed semi-detached house his father had purchased. Other family members living in the house were Manuel's three sisters and his two grandmothers. Manuel started schooling at Windermere Preparatory School three weeks before his fifth birthday in 1961. The class in his first year at school was racially mixed, and included Xhosa-speaking children. In the same year, the last African families living in Kensington were forcefully moved out of the area in terms of the Group Areas Act. At the age of 12, in 1968, Manuel started at Wesley Practising and Secondary School, an English-medium school, in Salt River. He began to learn English at the school, which had been established by educators in the region drawn from the South African Coloured People's Congress (SACPC) and the Teachers and Educational Professional Association, an older and more conservative version of the Trotskyite Teachers' League of South Africa. en
dc.format.medium Print en
dc.publisher BestRed en
dc.subject APARTHEID en
dc.subject BLACK CONSCIOUSNESS MOVEMENT en
dc.subject MANUEL en
dc.subject TREVOR ANDREW en
dc.title Trevor Manuel: anti-apartheid activist to government minister en
dc.type Chapter in Monograph en
dc.description.version Y en
dc.ProjectNumber TBBBBB en
dc.BudgetYear 2022/23 en
dc.ResearchGroup Developmental, Capable and Ethical State en
dc.SourceTitle The texture of dissent: defiant public intellectuals in South Africa en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Bohler, N en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Reddy, V. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Houston, G. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Schoeman, M. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Thuynsma, H. en
dc.PlaceOfPublication Cape Town en
dc.ArchiveNumber 9812630 en
dc.PageNumber 58-63 en
dc.outputnumber 14134 en
dc.bibliographictitle Houston, G. (2022) Trevor Manuel: anti-apartheid activist to government minister. In: Bohler, N, Reddy, V., Houston, G., Schoeman, M. & Thuynsma, H. (eds).The texture of dissent: defiant public intellectuals in South Africa. Cape Town: BestRed. 58-63. en
dc.publicationyear 2022 en
dc.contributor.author1 Houston, G. en


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