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Apartheid Spies and the Revolutionary Underground

William Keniston author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Wits University Press

Published:1st Nov '24

Should be back in stock very soon

Apartheid Spies and the Revolutionary Underground cover

Addresses the complex interplay between the apartheid state’s security services and its radical opponents, unveiling hidden struggles and offering unique insights into South Africa's liberation history.

An in-depth study of the assassination of Jeanette and Katryn Schoon at the hand of apartheid spy, Craig Williamson, that explores how the lives of a group of white activists intersected with and were impacted by the undercover security police and their operations both within and outside of South Africa.

On 28 June 1984 a parcel bomb sent by the apartheid security police exploded in an apartment building in Lubango, Angola, killing 36-year-old Jeanette Schoon and her six-year-old daughter Katryn. The Schoons were members of the revolutionary underground, exiled from South Africa and committed to both the African National Congress and to socialism. What many political activists had feared or suspected at the time was confirmed during the 1990s Truth and Reconciliation Commission: the bomb targeting the Schoons was sent by Craig Williamson, an apartheid spy and high-ranking member of the South African security service. 

Apartheid Spies and the Revolutionary Underground is the first book-length account of the assassination of Jeanette and Katryn Schoon. Jeanette Curtis Schoon and Craig Williamson first met in 1973 at Wits University. Schoon was part of a network of white student activists fighting apartheid; Williamson had successfully infiltrated the student movement and rose within its ranks. He held positions of trust, first within the National Union of South African Students and then, after pretending to ‘flee’ the country, as an office-bearer of the International Universities Exchange Fund in Sweden, which helped fund many South African activists in exile. 

The book uncovers how the lives of a group of white activitsts intersected with and were impacted by the undercover security police both within and outside of South Africa. Intensifying political oppression caused many young activisits to flee South Africa in 1976; many of them, like Jeanette and her partner Marius Schoon, joined the African National Congress in exile. Williamson and the Schoons’ paths, and those of their comrades, continued to cross: Williamson was a guest in their homes, a supplier of funds for their projects, a witness for the prosecution in political trials and, ultimately, the hand that directed targeted assassinations. 

Williamson received amnesty for his role in the Schoons’ murder, among other crimes, and continues to walk a free man. This book shows the limits of the TRC...

ISBN: 9781776149018

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

368 pages