Showing posts with label University of the Witwatersrand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of the Witwatersrand. Show all posts

22 August 2017

PAULINE SHEILA LIPSON - A MEMOIR

A POTTED HISTORY!

Pauline Sheila Lipson was born in Johannesburg on 12 April 1927. Her parents's surname was Spitz, and Pauline and I became "first cousins" when my mother, a widow with two small children, married my stepfather Maurice Spitz on 2 November 1931.

Mo, as my stepfather was known to one and all, was the youngest brother of Pauline's father, Harry, in a family of ten children, six brothers and four sisters.

Pauline was an only child, and we were both 5 years old when my mother married Mo Spitz.

At that stage we lived in an inner city suburb in Johannesburg called Berea, and we were there throughout our school years and until we left school.

We had two schools in the area near us - an all-girls school called the Johannesburg Girls High School, also known as Barnato Park, and an all-boys school called King Edward VII School, and both were in walking distance from our homes in Berea.

We were at each school from our primary years till the end of our secondary years when we matriculated.

Sometimes I was invited to "babysit" because her parents wanted to go out for the evening and the woman who lived there was away for a few days. On one of these occasions her parents, who had wanted reading lamps on either side of their beds had asked me if I could fit some for them as I was known to fiddle around at home doing all sorts of electrical repairs. When they came home from their outing they found some lamps waiting for them on their bedside pedestals.

We used to walk around the corner to visit each other, and on one occasion when I went to visit, Pauline had just had a terrible event which scarred her for life. There was a woman who lived in their house who was a sort of house-keeper/nanny, and one winter's night this woman had put a hot water bottle in Pauline's bed which had just been filled with boiling water. Pauline and this woman had just had a big argument and Pauline was very angry. She went into her bedroom and and banged herself down on the bed and the water-bottle burst. She was not called "Porky" for nothing - she was a heavy girl. As I remember it the wound took months to heal.

While we were schoolchildren our mothers would take us to visit aunts who lived around Johannesburg, and one of these aunts lived in a big house with a fish pond. Pauline and I  would play outside in the garden around the pond while the "grown-ups" were talking inside the house. I was a very timid boy and Pauline was much more of a doer than I was in those days. Pauline, who was full of mischief decided to push me into the pond when we were standing on its edge. For one of the very few times in my very timid life - and I don't know what possessed me - I managed to pull her into the pond after me, and we both got thoroughly soaked, of course.

Our mothers were suitably unimpressed with two soaking brats and put us in the car to take us home to change our clothes. On the way they had to stop at another aunt's house to attend to some fairly urgent matter, and they left us in the car while they went into the Aunt's house. The car was a very old Ford V8 prewar with a bench seat at the front and the leather seats had a binding strap of thin leather along the top covering the joining of two leather pieces. This strap had become loose over the years and it had some tacks which used to hold it in place having come loose. Between us and jumping around in the car from the front seat to the back seat and over the strap where the tacks were sticking out, Pauline managed to rip the length of her leg from the top down! As far as I know the scar remained with her for the rest of her life!

Over those growing up years Pauline and I saw each other regularly - our parents were great bridge players and they had many friends in common, apart from the family connection.

 One of the boys I was at school with lived at the other end of the same street that I lived in and his name was David Marcus. David had a first cousin called Arnold Lipson who was the youngest of 7 children and they lived in a very large house in a suburb some distance from where we lived and the house had a tennis court in the grounds. Occasionally we went there for a game of tennis and so I met Arnie Lipson who a few years later, met Pauline Spitz and married her around the time of Pauline's 21st birthday, in April 1948, and so we became related.

With Pauline being married and me still being at university, we saw each other less and less in those days, but never lost touch.

The next connection was of a totally different sort. When Pauline finished school she became an articled clerk to a lawyer for her practical training to become a lawyer. The lawyer's name was Siegfried Raphaely and he was a cousin of my father Morris De Saxe who had died in 1930 when he was 31 and I was three years old.

When Siegfried retired (or died - I don't remember which sequence of events occurred!) Pauline worked for his son Pat Raphaely, who took over his father's legal practice. I think she worked there until she finished her articles.

I think before Pauline had ever heard of Legal Aid, and during the period after the start of World War II after 1939 when I was at high school in Johannesburg, and helpers in organisations such as Legal Aid were not easy to obtain, I used to work there during my school holidays as a messenger boy and general "dog's body" as people like me were called at the time, running errands from the basement of the Johannesburg Magistrates' Court, where Legal Aid had been "generously" provided with accommodation.

And then the next series of events which brought Pauline into the Legal Aid Bureau in Johannesburg:
My aunt Mary Kuper started work at Legal Aid in the 1930s with Ruth Heyman who was, I think, its first director. When Ruth left, my aunt took over the running of Legal Aid and stayed there until 1948, when she died of leukaemia aged 46. A few years later Pauline went to work at Legal Aid.

One of the other stories I am fond of re-telling is one about books. Pauline was always a great reader, and very often she would borrow books and sometimes forget to return them. On one occasion she had borrowed a book from me which was one of my favourite books and I hadn't seen her for some time so was unable to ask for its return.

Pauline and Arnie had recently moved into a new house and they were having a dinner party. My then wife and I were invited to the party and after dinner I asked Pauline if I could take the book home, as I had seen it in her bookcase. She said I couldn't as the book was hers, so I took it off the shelf and showed her my name and address inside and the date of purchase! So I got my book back and took it home.

Two other items binding us over time were that Pauline's second daughter Margie was born on 17 January 1953, which was the day my grandmother died.  My grandmother lived in my parents' house for five years up to her death, so Margie's birthday is one I don't ever forget! Her youngest daughter Lindsay used to work at a bookshop in Rissik Street, Johannesburg in the 1970s and I used to go to the shop once a week to pick up the weekly journals and comic for myself and my  kids. Lindsay and I used to have long conversations when she was supposed to serve customers in the shop and I was supposed to make my purchases and go back to work, but I don't think it particularly affected either of us!

There was a long period during my marriage when my then wife decided she didn't like the Lipsons and didn't want us to see them any more and that was the situation for many years. Then we came to live in Sydney in Australia and my wife and I separated after 31 years. I was then 58 years old. When I turned 65 and knew of course that Pauline would soon be 65 I waited until her birthday was due and sent a birthday card. She was delighted and we resumed our friendship from them on. Then her three daughters came to live in Australia, one at a time - in Melbourne, and our friendship took on new dimensions.

After Arnie died their daughters and us - my partner and I - we had visited Pauline in Johannesburg in 1997, so she had already met him - tried to nag Pauline to come and live in Melbourne, as we had come to live in Melbourne in 2001, and because her whole life had been in Johannesburg, she couldn't make up her mind to leave. Finally, in about 2005, and because she realised that as she was ageing and health issues might became a major issue, it might be a good idea to be near her family, so she came to live in Melbourne and we had regular contact until her death.

I am six months older than Pauline, and we have been friends from the age of 5 until her death in Melbourne a few weeks ago, on 30 July 2017, when she was 90 years old. She will be sadly missed!

The photo below was taken at the bottom of the Sydney Royal Botanic Gardens on Sydney Harbour when Pauline and Arnold Lipson visited me in Sydney for the first time in early 1993:



We placed this notice in The Age newspaper on Friday 4 AUGUST 2017:



(this is  a work in progress as at 27 August 2017)

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On 10 April 2001 Pauline was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws at the University of the Witwatersrand , Johannesburg.

The Order of Procedure for the Conferment of the honorary degree is the fourth item down:
HONORARY DEGREE

Doctor of Laws

Presented by Professor W D Reekie Dean of the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management BCom (Edin) PhD(Strath)

Pauline Sheila Lipson
The Citation:

PAULINE SHEILA LIPSON
Pauline Lipson was born in Johannesburg in 1927 and attended the Johannesburg High School for Girls. In 1945, she entered into articles of clerkship with a firm of attorneys. In 1946 and 1947, while doing her articles, she studied law part-time at the University of the Witwatersrand. She completed her professional qualifications in 1950.

At the end of that year, she was approached to take over the running of the Johannesburg Legal Aid Bureau on a temporary basis until a suitable permanent director was appointed. There was no need to look any further. The Legal Aid had found its permanent director.

The Legal Aid Bureau, founded in 1937, provided legal advice to underprivileged clients and secured them representation in court long before it was fashionable to do so. Its survival through the second half of the twentieth century was entirely due to Pauline Lipson's resourcefulness and dedication, her tenaciousness and her courage.

Lipson's first child was born in June 1950, shortly before she joined the Bureau. She took maternity leave in 1953 and 1955 (sic) to have two further children but her involvement never wavered. Thanks to her stewardship the Bureau grew into one of the most significant providers of legal services to indigent South Africans and by April 1999 it was staffed by sixteen paid employees and a large number of volunteer workers.

As Director, her duties included giving legal advice and assistance in a diverse range of fields. She negotiated with employers, with other practitioners, with welfare and non-governmental organisations, and with government departments. She also became expert in training law students and provided 'in-house' tutelage to students from Wits University, the University of the North and the University of Zululand.

Her chosen career required her to have superhuman qualities - tact, persistence, a sense of humour and what can only be described as great-heartedness. She applied legendary powers of persuasion in getting legal practitioners in Johannesburg to become actively involved in the Bureau's work and in raising funds for it. These attributes have, with the passage of time, led to her becoming an icon among legal practitioners in Johannesburg. Few other lawyers are as widely known among ordinary people, or as deeply respected for their contribution to the welfare of the less privileged members of our society.

Constitutional Court President, Justice Arthur Chaskalson, has said of Lipson:

                 If we are to address our past in a meaningful way and transform our
                 society into one in which the constitutional aspirations of
                 democracy, human dignity, equality and freedom are to be realised
                 in substance as well as form, our country needs people like Pauline
                 Lipson who, in different fields of endeavour, are willing to commit
                 themselves to doing what is necessary to create a fair and just
                 society. In acknowledging Lipson's lifetime commitment to justice,
                 and the sacrifices she has made in pursuit of that end, Wits is
                 identifying with and recognising the importance of such a
                 contribution.

In a letter to the Chancellor of this university in support of the proposal that an honorary doctorate be conferred upon Pauline Lipson, former President Nelson Mandela writes as follows:

                 I first became aware of her work as Director of the Legal Aid
                 Bureau during the early 1950s. At the time, and for a number of
                 years thereafter, the Bureau was the only body to whom the indigent
                 could turn for legal assistance. Pauline Lipson dedicated herself to
                 the task. I still remember when the Legal Aid Bureau's offices were
                 in the Old Post Office building in Rissik Street. The 'Native'
                 Divorce Court was also there. The offices of Mandela and Tambo
                 were in Chancellor House opposite the Magistrate's Court - too far
                 for me to go back during short adjournments. I availed myself of
                 Pauline Lipson's friendship and hospitality. I went to her office to
                 make urgent telephone calls and to have tea. The waiting room was
                 full of men and women who had come for help. Pauline would
                 interrupt a busy schedule of interviewing people and urging young
                 members of the Bar and attorneys to appear on behalf of her non-
                 paying clients. She was a persuasive lady to whom few of us could
                 say no.

Pauline Lipson is one of the unsung heroines of the struggle for a just and equitable legal system in South Africa. She has been a champion who devoted her entire professional life to an attempt to provide indigent persons with access to justice. It is fitting that this university should pay tribute to her contribution bu conferring upon her the degree of Doctor of Laws honoris causa.



I believe the person on the left is the other PhD graduand - Joy ChristineNalukwago Lwanga-Lumu.





From left to right I believe we have: Chairman of Council The Honourable Justice E Cameron, Joy Christine Nalukwago Lwanga-Lumu, Pauline Sheila Lipson, President of Convocation Professor John Shochot.


   

22 January 2014

WITWATERSRAND UNIVERSITY VICE-CHANCELLOR JOINS THE ZIONISTS

An incident occurred at Wits University which caused the Vice-Chancellor to become involved.

The episode related to a visiting pianist from Israel and there was a protest by a group of people who support the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement supporting Palestine and against Israel and who were against the pianist being allowed to give a performance at the University.

Now before getting launched on the rights and wrongs of the issue, it needs to be stated that from the onset of the apartheid years in 1948, Wits University students were prominent in anti-aparthied actions and demonstrations and in support of the university being able to allow people to study who came from any and every "race" group in South Africa.

There were appalling actions by authorities, police and apartheid spies on campus who tried to stop protests and who were instrumental in getting students expelled and/or removed from campus and/or suspended.

The present incident has occurred post the apartheid years but events linger in the memory and are not easily forgotten.

First the background story:

Statement from the Vice-Chancellor and Principal

By Prof. Loyiso Nongxa

15 March 2013
The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, deeply regrets that a concert held on its campus last night was disrupted by some members of the University community and representatives of external organisations.

In light of this incident, the University takes this opportunity to issue a public apology to all those who attended the concert. The disruption of this event points to intolerance on the part of some members of the University community and goes against the core values espoused by the University. The University is investigating this matter and will take the necessary action based on its policies, processes and procedures.

The University reiterates that  the views and opinions expressed by the Students' Representative Council or any other student groups on campus do not represent the official views of the University, nor are they necessarily an accurate reflection of the views of the majority of students, staff and alumni.

Wits University is a leading institution on the African continent renowned for encouraging dialogue and debate on often diverse and conflicting views confronting society. It provides a platform for different constituencies to express their views and opinions through considered debate and intellectual engagement in the spirit of tolerance, respect and openness.

We value the diverse views of all our staff, students and alumni regardless of their race, religion, gender, culture, language, ideology or otherwise, provided that they do not exceed the limitations explicated in our Constitution.

The diversity of people, programmes and ideas at Wits leads to the richness and robustness of the institution. This is indeed one of the greatest qualities of excellent higher education institutions, and one which Wits cherishes.

Prof. Loyiso Nongxa
Vice-Chancellor and Principal
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg


8 APRIL 2013: UPDATE ON ISSUES RELATING TO THE DISRUPTION OF A CONCERT ON THE WITS CAMPUS

On 12 March 2013 a University-sanctioned musical recital by pianist, Mr Yossi Reshef, was disrupted by a group of students and members of the public.

Understandably, the University has received many letters from members of the University community expressing concern at this incident. At the same time, it is clear from many of these messages that there are a number of matters that need to be clarified.

The University would therefore like to reiterate the following:

1. The University views the disruption of the concert in an extremely serious light and is addressing this violation of its Code of Conduct through a thorough, formal investigation and disciplinary process. The University requests that all parties allow the law to take its course.
2. Wits issued a public apology within 24 hours of the incident occurring. (This apology is published above this letter.)
3. A personal letter of apology was sent from both the Vice-Chancellor and Principal, and the Vice-Chancellor Designate, to Mr Yossi Reshef.
4. The Vice-Chancellor and Principal met with the South African Jewish Board of Deputies to discuss this matter.
5. The University reaffirms its unwavering commitment to academic freedom.

The University therefore believes that alarmist judgments and blame heaped upon Wits as an institution by some commentators and media reports is unwarranted and misguided. It is not fair or reasonable to seek to tarnish the hard-earned reputation of a venerable University because of the actions of a group of protesters.

Wits has a proud history and tradition of being a vibrant platform and space for diverse individuals and groups to engage with its multiplicity of stakeholders, in a convivial environment. It has always advocated for academic freedom and institutional autonomy and will continue to do so, as these are the foundation of knowledge and intellectual engagement in any great University.

We value the concerns and comments received on this matter and give the assurance that this matter will be dealt with appropriately. We reiterate that the University is ensuring that those responsible for perpetrating this act are held accountable and will be subject to its disciplinary procedures. This process is already underway and we will inform all stakeholders of the outcomes. We have also offered to host the concert again and to honour all the tickets that have previously been sold.

Please do not hesitate to contact me directly via Loyiso.Nongxa@wits.ac.za should you wish to engage further on this matter.

Professor Loyiso Nongxa
Vice-Chancellor and Principal
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
8 April 2013


16 APRIL 2013: UPDATE ON THE INVESTIGATION INTO THE YOSSI RESHEF CONCERT

The University of the Witwatersrand can confirm that it has charged 11 members of the Wits community for a possible contravention of the University’s codes of conduct relating to the disruption of a concert that was hosted on the Wits campus on 12 March 2013.

External Senior Counsel  has been appointed in terms of the University’s Rules for Student Discipline to act in lieu of a Student Discipline Committee, to chair the hearing, and to carry out all of its functions and to exercise all its powers. As such, he or she will make a decision as to whether or not to publish details of the disciplinary proceedings.

Prof. Loyiso Nongxa
Vice-Chancellor and Principal
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
16 April 2013

_______________________________________________________________

Here are reports about the outcome of the demonstrations:

Image

VERDICT REACHED IN CASE AGAINST STUDENTS WHO DISRUPTED CONCERT AT WITS

Wits University announced on Friday, 17 January 2014 that a verdict had been reached in a case which saw 11 students charged for the disruption of a concert by musician Yossi Reshef on its campus last year.
Ten students have been found guilty of misconduct for disrupting or inciting others to disrupt the piano recital. They have been excluded from the University for a period of one year. The sentence is suspended provided that the students are not found guilty of any other form of misconduct for a period of two years. These students will not be allowed to hold any office in any student governance structure for a period of one year. In addition, they will each have to perform 80 hours of community service, as determined by the University.

________________________________________________________________________

Verdict reached in case against students who disrupted concert at Wits


17 January 2014
Statement from the Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of the Witwatersrand
The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, today announced that a verdict has been reached in a case which saw 11 students charged for the disruption of a concert by musician Yossi Reshef on its campus last year.

Ten students have been found guilty of misconduct for disrupting or inciting others to disrupt the piano recital. They have been excluded from the University for a period of one year. The sentence is suspended provided that the students are not found guilty of any other form of misconduct for a period of two years. These students will not be allowed to hold any office in any student governance structure for a period of one year. In addition, they will each have to perform 80 hours of community service, as determined by the University.

One of these students has further been found guilty of not obeying a lawful instruction issued by a University employee, and will be required to perform an additional 50 hours of community service for this offence.
The verdict was handed to the University by an independent advocate today, Friday, 17 January 2014. The Senior Counsel was appointed in terms of the University’s Rules for Student Discipline to act in lieu of a Student Discipline Committee, to chair the disciplinary hearing, to carry out all of its functions and to exercise all its powers in line with the University’s policies, procedures and processes.

Wits is renowned for encouraging freedom of expression, dialogue and debate on often diverse and conflicting views confronting society, provided that it does not exceed the limitations explicated in our Constitution. The University provides a platform for different constituencies to express their views and opinions through considered debate and intellectual engagement in the spirit of tolerance, respect and openness.

The diversity of people, programmes and ideas at Wits leads to the richness and robustness of the institution. This is indeed one of the greatest qualities of excellent higher education institutions, and one which Wits cherishes.

Professor Adam Habib
Vice-Chancellor and Principal
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg


____________________________________________________________________

South African Jewish Board of Deputies

SAJBD : Outcome of Wits Disciplinary Process

by The SAJBD on 20 January 2014


The verdict against ten students guilty of misconduct during a concert at Wits University represents a resounding reaffirmation by Wits of the values of academic freedom, diversity and tolerance. In March last year, a group of demonstrators lead by members of the then Student Representative Council invaded the venue where Israeli-born pianist Yossi Reshev was giving a recital and prevented the event from continuing.

 This behavior was immediately condemned by the University leadership and steps were duly implemented to investigate the incident and call to book those responsible. In addition to taking appropriate action against those who perpetrated the disruption of the Reshef recital, the University also hosted a follow-up concert by a group of internationally renowned Israeli jazz musicians headed by Daniel Zamir.

 This resoundingly successful event took place on 28 August in the Wits Great Hall, which was packed to capacity for the occasion. All necessary measures were taken by the University to ensure that the concert went ahead without incident, thereby affirming the University’s commitment to creating safe spaces for all on the campus. The SA Jewish Board of Deputies (SAJBD) applauds Wits University for taking a firm and unambiguous stand against those who abuse their right to protest by flouting the principles of academic freedom and unlawfully seeking to silence alternative viewpoints.

The outcome of the above hearings sends out a clear message that Wits remains committed to providing a free, open environment in which the values freedom of expression and association are strenuously upheld and where any behavior aimed at preventing others from exercising those rights is not tolerated. The SAJBD is hopeful that the satisfactory outcome to the Reshef affair will usher in a new era of mutual respect, trust and openness on Wits campus, one that provides safe spaces for the expression of diverse opinions and where people of differing viewpoints can learn from rather than try to silence one another.”

Issued by Wendy Kahn, National Director, SA Jewish Board of Deputies 0824443675
 





25 November 2011

SOUTH AFRICA'S ANC GOVERNMENT ENTERING DICTATORSHIP TERRITORY OF OTHER AFRICAN COUNTRIES!

University of the Witwatersrand opposes South African government's censorship attempts - Statement on the "Secrecy Bill"




23 November 2011

"The University of the Witwatersrand notes with concern the decision by Parliament and the ruling African National Congress to pass the "Secrecy Bill", which we believe stands as a deep threat to the fundamental principles enshrined in our Constitution.

The Protection of State Information Bill may be a necessary replacement for apartheid-era legislation, but in its current form would obstruct the access to information citizens need to ensure transparent and accountable governance. The Bill entrusts the power of classification, and the avenue of appeals against classification, to those who might benefit from the obscurity provided by classification. The Bill allows for ‘national interest’ to be invoked in justification of classification, but provides sufficient latitude of interpretation of what constitutes the ‘national interest’ to allow unscrupulous use of this measure. It remains silent on the 'public interest'. The current formulation of this Bill and the heavy penalties it mandates would impede both the right of the public to legitimate freedom of information and the intellectual enquiry that is the essence of academic work.

The proposal for a Media Appeals Tribunal, currently under consideration by the ANC, might enable direct State suppression of the freedom of expression. Accountable to Parliament, which is constituted overwhelmingly by the ruling party, the Tribunal could undermine the media’s necessary role in informing society. The ruling party’s antagonistic attitude to the print media has been illustrated by the recent public eviction of a journalist from a media conference and – very disturbingly – by the arrest and detention of a journalist at the order of a politician. Even in the absence of such provocation the proposed tribunal would represent an unacceptable intrusion into media freedom.

Taken together, the two initiatives attack key principles that underpin a democracy – access to information and freedom of speech – and threaten this country’s widely admired constitutional order. The University expresses its deep concern at the implications of these measures for civil liberties and the pursuit of intellectual enquiry, and insists that, in their current form, they be abandoned."

Read Wits' 2010 statement on the Protection of Information Bill and the Media Tribunal Process

The Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory, together with the Wits School of Law, has been engaged in processes of dialogue around the Protection of State Information Bill since its first emergence as a draft piece of legislation in 2008. Read an analysis of the Bill’s remaining flaws –

Summary Version


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Full Version


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90 years old, political gay activist, hosting two web sites, one personal: http://www.red-jos.net one shared with my partner, 94-year-old Ken Lovett: http://www.josken.net and also this blog. The blog now has an alphabetical index: http://www.red-jos.net/alpha3.htm

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