Norma Kitson

Norma Cranko Kitson (18 August 1933 – 12 June 2002) was a South African political activist. She participated in the fight against apartheid in South Africa.[1]

Early life

Norma Belle Cranko was born in Berea, Durban, in a wealthy Jewish family.[2] Her father was a chemist; her mother Millie Stiller Cranko was an immigrant from Poland.[3] Ballet dancer John Cranko was her cousin.[4]

Career

At 14 she went to work as a secretary. She joined the South African Communist Party in the 1950s, and became a printer for the cause. After her husband was jailed in 1964, she left South Africa with her children and settled in London,[5] where she set up a women's cooperative press in Gray's Inn Road. She was often to be found protesting apartheid in Trafalgar Square, in front of South Africa House,[6] as part of the City of London Anti-Apartheid Group, which she founded.[4]

After the end of apartheid, the Kitsons were recognized by the African National Congress as veterans of the cause. She was secretary of a Zimbabwe women writers' group late in her life, and wrote a creative writing textbook during that time.[7]

Personal life

Norma Cranko married a World War II veteran, mechanical engineer David Kitson. They had two children, Stephen and Amandla; they divorced while Dave was serving a long prison sentence. She remarried in 1973, to choreographer Sidney Cherfas, and divorced again; then remarried her first husband after his freedom in 1984.[8] In 1986, she published an autobiography, Where Sixpence Lives.[9]

She moved to Harare, Zimbabwe after 1994. Norma Kitson died from emphysema in 2002, aged 68 years.[4]

In 2011 she was honored by the Republic of Sierra Leone by a postage stamp issued for her in their series “Legendary Heroes of Africa”.[10]

References

  1. "Norma Kitson - Obituaries". The Independent. Retrieved 4 January 2011.
  2. John D. Battersby, "A Hunger for Justice" New York Times (22 November 1987).
  3. "Norma Kitson" South African History Online (2011).
  4. 1 2 3 Denis Herbstein, "Norma Kitson" The Guardian (12 July 2002).
  5. Adam Yamey, Exodus to Africa (Lulu.com 2015): 235. ISBN 9781326302429
  6. Padraig O'Malley, interview with Paul Trewhela (13 June 2004), Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory.
  7. Richard Cumyn, "An Interview with Norma Kitson" Blue Moon Review (1997).
  8. Denis Herbstein, "David Kitson Obituary" The Guardian (17 January 2011).
  9. Norma Kitson, Where Sixpence Lives (Random House UK 1986). ISBN 9780701207724
  10. "12 Jews Honored on African Stamps as Apartheid Fighters" Jerusalem Post (3 January 2011).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.