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United Savings Bank() FSB The little bank with the big rates. 855-0550 04 Mazel Toy PHIL On Your 50th Bar Mitzvah Anniversary Love, Hy, Michele, Ron Lou, Steve, Rebecca, Bradley ,FRIDAY, ,MAY 26,198 H elen Suzman is the very model of a pam- pered Johannesburg matron. Slim and chic, her carefully coiffed hair and manicured nails reflect the genteel elegance and uncom- promisingly affluence of the heavily Jewish suburb of Houghton in which she lives. Helen Suzman is also living proof that appearances can be deceptive. Beneath the carefully cultivated exterior lies a penetrating inquisitiveness and a fierce determination that have combined to moni- tor and expose a range of evil- doing, from the petty humilia- tions to the grosser racial ex- cesses of South Africa's apar- theid regime. For the past 36 years, the wealthy folk of Houghton have consistently chosen Helen Suzman to be their representative in the South African parliament, pro- viding her with a grandstand seat in an arena where one of the great contemporary tragedies has been played out. During that time, the Member for Houghton has cannily translated privilege into prominence and pro- minence into power, estab- lishing an international plat- form from which to criticize and torment her racially obsessed peers, challenging them to live up to even the minimal standards of demo- cracy which they themselves espouse. In the process, she has become a legend, an interna- tional symbol of hope in a hopeless land, the voice of the dispossessed, a portrait in courage. Last week, however, the longest-serving and best- known member of the South African parliament — argu- ably one of the best-known Jews in public life anywhere — announced her retirement. It was an occasion that marked the end of an era, not only for this highly political animal, but also for South African politics and, not least, for the diminishing breed of old-style liberals who left their mark on the 1950s and 1960s. Helen Suzman, now 71, de- scribes herself as " straight, old-fashioned liberal" and reckons that if her Lithua- nian father had washed up in New York instead of Johan- nesburg, she would probably have been a teacher on the East Side, a civil rights lawyer, "a mini Bella Abzug." In postwar South Africa, however, there was one clear cause, and Helen Suzman — along with many fellow mid- dle-class- Jewish intellectuals whose parents had arrived il- literate and penniless from Eastern Europe — threw herself enthusiastically into battle. Unlike the significant band of dissenting Jews, who were drawn to the Communist Par- Helen Suzman: Liberal legend. ty and other organizations dedicated to violent revolu- tion, she chose to take the constitutional route. The unusually attractive, unusually bright, convent- educated economics graduate who had married an eminent Johannesburg physician, Mosie Suzman, was just 35 when she first won a seat in parliament in 1953. It was a time when Winston Churchill was Prime Minister of Britain and the Eisenhower ad- ministration was in its infancy. Six years later, Helen Suz- man joined a rebellion in the United Party — then the of- ficial opposition — and be- came cofounder of the non- racial Progressive Party, which was based on a quali- fied franchise and the rule of law. In the elections that followed, the rebels were routed and Helen Suzman emerged as the new party's only • elected representative. For the next 13 years, her voice was the sole, unrelen- ting, parliamentary protest against the disenfranchise- ment of South Africa's black, Asian and mixed-race majori- ty and the abuses heaped upon them. Only her fellow legislators refused to acknowledge that she spoke for those who had no voice; to the rest of the world, her lonely vigil in behalf of 20 million black fellow-countrymen meant that she represented more South Africans than the rest of parliament put together. She became famous for her head-to-head confrontations with the hard men of A- frikaner politics, as well as for her pointed, persistent ques- tioning of cabinet ministers which frequently led to em- barrassing disclosures about the practices of apartheid. Today, she does not hide her satisfaction at the hackles she has raised. On one celebrated occasion, she recalls, a furious govermment minister lashed out at her in parliament, claiming that her questions were embarrassing , South Africa in the eyes of the -4 4 -4 I A 11 0 "It is not my questions that are embarrassing South Africa," she replied tartly. "It is your answers." In the early years of her career, Helen Suzman says she encountered "a good deal of anti-Semitism" from her political opponents in the Na- tional Party, which had open- ly supported the Nazis during World War II. "They would shout at me, `Go back to Moscow.' Later, • they shouted _ _ 'Go back to Israel.' But after the Six Day War," she says, "Israel became too good for me and I was sent back to Moscow again!' Of greater concern were the stream of abusive letters and telephone calls — "all anti- -4 Semitic" — which became a part of her life and her career. Not all, however, were threatening. She clearly --4 relishes one exchange of let- ters with the head of a super- patriotic and powerful organi- zation for Afrikaner women. d ■ 4 The writer reminded the Jewish parliamentarian that the Afrikaners had once trekked through the veld, Bi- ble in hand, to build a new 4 promised land. "What," she demanded, "did your an- cesters do?" "My ancestors," replied Helen Suzman with a char- acteristic flourish, "were busy .1 writing the Bible!' Yet another letter appealed to her ironic sense of humor: an Afrikaner woman whose son had shot and killed a black promised to vote for her because she had heard that