The Japan Times - S.Africa's Breyten Breytenbach, writer and anti-apartheid activist

EUR -
AED 3.825399
AFN 79.153772
ALL 98.736666
AMD 415.287403
ANG 1.877402
AOA 952.448759
ARS 1090.834985
AUD 1.659602
AWG 1.877301
AZN 1.773879
BAM 1.950918
BBD 2.103246
BDT 127.032085
BGN 1.954353
BHD 0.392577
BIF 3035.968151
BMD 1.041499
BND 1.409579
BOB 7.197814
BRL 6.181396
BSD 1.041698
BTN 90.061042
BWP 14.407873
BYN 3.408985
BYR 20413.370758
BZD 2.092473
CAD 1.496639
CDF 2963.063339
CHF 0.944473
CLF 0.037424
CLP 1032.625104
CNY 7.574405
CNH 7.583047
COP 4438.460457
CRC 523.891405
CUC 1.041499
CUP 27.59971
CVE 110.714893
CZK 25.152813
DJF 185.095046
DKK 7.460863
DOP 63.958481
DZD 140.701185
EGP 52.405391
ERN 15.622478
ETB 131.280745
FJD 2.408725
FKP 0.857765
GBP 0.845695
GEL 2.967827
GGP 0.857765
GHS 15.832891
GIP 0.857765
GMD 76.029524
GNF 9015.210639
GTQ 8.051849
GYD 217.831709
HKD 8.1117
HNL 26.568478
HRK 7.685788
HTG 136.030219
HUF 410.555067
IDR 16929.766548
ILS 3.691409
IMP 0.857765
INR 90.040306
IQD 1364.363046
IRR 43847.087052
ISK 146.070191
JEP 0.857765
JMD 163.450942
JOD 0.738837
JPY 163.128346
KES 134.870181
KGS 91.079163
KHR 4198.280235
KMF 492.212582
KPW 937.348773
KRW 1496.049575
KWD 0.321084
KYD 0.868123
KZT 542.644563
LAK 22704.667648
LBP 93318.266805
LKR 311.072991
LRD 203.040547
LSL 19.26565
LTL 3.075274
LVL 0.629992
LYD 5.129371
MAD 10.43556
MDL 19.427287
MGA 4952.325547
MKD 61.527275
MMK 3382.746528
MNT 3539.012042
MOP 8.356147
MRU 41.503932
MUR 48.377901
MVR 16.044292
MWK 1806.999849
MXN 21.375127
MYR 4.620606
MZN 66.55058
NAD 19.267918
NGN 1621.613087
NIO 38.225035
NOK 11.745775
NPR 144.098067
NZD 1.838236
OMR 0.400889
PAB 1.041698
PEN 3.872817
PGK 4.142028
PHP 60.981759
PKR 290.213572
PLN 4.222409
PYG 8239.379829
QAR 3.791571
RON 4.974506
RSD 117.103005
RUB 103.370761
RWF 1447.682926
SAR 3.906769
SBD 8.819417
SCR 15.731842
SDG 625.940544
SEK 11.464035
SGD 1.411538
SHP 0.857765
SLE 23.694484
SLL 21839.702882
SOS 595.18962
SRD 36.53548
STD 21556.91634
SVC 9.115188
SYP 13541.563586
SZL 19.270615
THB 35.280778
TJS 11.400894
TMT 3.645245
TND 3.328112
TOP 2.439295
TRY 37.129316
TTD 7.076325
TWD 34.071066
TZS 2629.783534
UAH 43.751107
UGX 3833.424736
USD 1.041499
UYU 45.585915
UZS 13534.272674
VES 57.522481
VND 26131.197567
VUV 123.648794
WST 2.917057
XAF 654.32261
XAG 0.033809
XAU 0.000378
XCD 2.814702
XDR 0.802595
XOF 657.185531
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.333095
ZAR 19.256229
ZMK 9374.731321
ZMW 29.036635
ZWL 335.362095
  • RBGPF

    0.1600

    62.36

    +0.26%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    7.42

    +2.02%

  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.58

    -1.9%

  • NGG

    -1.5400

    60.05

    -2.56%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    8.38

    -2.03%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.49

    -0.26%

  • RIO

    -0.6100

    61.12

    -1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.96

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    -1.2000

    127.92

    -0.94%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.15

    -1.04%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    49.26

    -0.59%

  • GSK

    -0.3500

    33.43

    -1.05%

  • AZN

    0.2400

    68.2

    +0.35%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    36.57

    -0.44%

  • BP

    -0.3900

    31.13

    -1.25%

S.Africa's Breyten Breytenbach, writer and anti-apartheid activist
S.Africa's Breyten Breytenbach, writer and anti-apartheid activist / Photo: © PRESS OFFICE/AFP

S.Africa's Breyten Breytenbach, writer and anti-apartheid activist

Breyten Breytenbach, who died Sunday, was one of South Africa's most honoured writers, who found beauty in his Afrikaans language but was horrified at the white supremacy imposed by his government.

Text size:

The poet, author and painter had not lived in South Africa for decades, leaving in the early 1960s to settle in Paris, where he became a global voice against apartheid.

What was intended to be a short and secret trip back in 1975 led to him spending seven years in jail, two in solitary confinement, after he was betrayed and arrested.

French president Francois Mitterrand helped secure his release in 1982 and he returned to France to become a citizen.

He travelled back to South Africa regularly, according to his daughter Daphnee Breytenbach, who confirmed his death to AFP.

"My father, the South African painter and poet Breyten Breytenbach, died peacefully on Sunday, November 24, in Paris, at the age of 85," she said.

"Immense artist, militant against apartheid, he fought for a better world until the end."

- 'Albino Terrorist' -

Breytenbach was born in the small Western Cape town of Bonnievale in 1939 at a time when Afrikaans was emerging with a distinct identity as a language, having been derided as "kitchen Dutch".

When in 1964 Breytenbach published his first volume of poetry -- "Die ysterkoei moet sweet", or The Iron Cow Must Sweat -- Afrikaans was not just ascendent but had given the name "apartheid" to South Africa's brutal system of racial segregation.

With Afrikaners in power, their language became ever more associated with the regime.

"I'd never reject Afrikaans as a language, but I reject it as part of the Afrikaner political identity. I no longer consider myself an Afrikaner," he said in an interview with The New York Times the following year.

In his language and politics, Breytenbach pushed back against the strictures of the country in which he was born.

He travelled around Europe in his early 20s, eventually settling in 1962 in Paris, where he met his wife, Yolande Ngo Thi Hoang Lien, who was born in Vietnam and raised in France.

She was refused a visa to visit South Africa in the late 1960s as she was considered "non-white" by the apartheid system.

Breytenbach returned to the country in the early 1970s on a false passport to deliver money to the anti-apartheid struggle and meet white activists.

But he was discovered and sentenced to nine years in prison, serving seven.

Of his more than 50 books, most are in Afrikaans. His acclaimed 1984 prison memoir, "The True Confession of an Albino Terrorist", is in English.

In the book, he recalls the horrors of hearing fellow inmates being hanged, often for political crimes.

"Very often –- no, all the time really –- I relive those years of horror and corruption, and I try to imagine, as I did then with the heart an impediment to breathing, what it must be like to be executed. What it must be like to be. Executed," he wrote.

- Turned to painting -

His path crossed once, briefly, with another famous inmate.

Nelson Mandela was for a time transferred from Robben Island to Pollsmoor prison in Cape Town, where Breytenbach was serving his time.

The writer was tasked with preparing new prison clothes for the future president.

Breytenbach eventually turned to painting to portray surreal human and animal figures, often in captivity, with his art displayed in Johannesburg, Brussels, Amsterdam, Hong Kong and Paris.

His literature gathered several prizes, including the international Zbigniew Herbert International Literary Award (2017), the Mahmoud Darwish Literature Prize (2010) and the Van der Hoogt prize for Dutch literature (1972).

"His poems are rich in metaphors and are a complex mixture of references to Buddhism, Afrikaans idiomatic speech, and memories of the South African landscape," according to the Hague-based Writers Unlimited foundation.

For all his activism, when democracy arrived in 1994, the older and gray-bearded Breytenbach did not return to embrace the new South Africa.

He wrestled with the failings of the democratic government, even with Mandela, despairing at what he called in Harpers magazine in 2008 the "seemingly never-ending parade of corrupt clowns in power at all levels".

Breytenbach also taught at the University of Cape Town, the Goree Institute in Dakar and New York University.

T.Sasaki--JT