Chris Hani

Activist

Birthday June 28, 1942

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Cofimvaba, Transkei, Union of South Africa (now Cofimvaba, Eastern Cape, South Africa)

DEATH DATE 1993-4-10, Dawn Park, Boksburg, Gauteng, South Africa (50 years old)

Nationality South Africa

#24547 Most Popular

1942

Chris Hani (28 June 1942 – 10 April 1993), born Martin Thembisile Hani, was the leader of the South African Communist Party and chief of staff of uMkhonto we Sizwe, the armed wing of the African National Congress (ANC).

Thembisile Hani was born on 28 June 1942 in the Xhosa village in Cofimvaba, Transkei.

1957

He attended Lovedale school in 1957, to finish his last two years.

He twice finished two school grades in a single year.

When Hani was 12 years old, after hearing his father's explanations about apartheid and the African National Congress (ANC), he wished to join the ANC but was still too young to be accepted.

In Lovedale school, Hani joined the ANC Youth League when he was 15 years old, even though political activities were not allowed at black schools under apartheid.

He influenced other students to join the ANC.

1959

In 1959, at the University of Fort Hare in Alice, Eastern Cape, Hani studied English, Latin and modern and classical literature.

He did not participate in any sport, saying: "I would rather fight apartheid than play sport."

Hani, in an interview on the Wankie campaign, mentioned that he was a Rhodes University graduate.

At the age of 15, he joined the ANC Youth League.

As a student, he was active in protests against the Bantu Education Act.

He worked as a clerk for a law firm.

Following his graduation, he joined Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), the armed wing of the ANC.

1960

They were joint operations between Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) and the Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army in the late 1960s.

The Luthuli Detachment operation consolidated Hani's reputation as a soldier in the black army that took the field against apartheid and its allies.

His role as a fighter from the earliest days of MK's exile (following the arrest of Nelson Mandela and the other internal MK leaders at Rivonia) was an important part in the fierce loyalty that Hani later enjoyed in some quarters as MK's Deputy Commander (Joe Modise was overall commander).

1962

His father Gilbert Hani was a mine union worker and political activist who left the country to go into exile in 1962 and returned to South Africa in 1991.

His mother Mary Hani was a simple person who had never attended school.

He was the fifth of six children.

1963

Following his arrest under the Suppression of Communism Act, he went into exile in Lesotho in 1963.

Because of Hani's involvement with Umkhonto we Sizwe, he was forced into hiding by the South African government and changed his first name to Chris.

He received military training in the Soviet Union and served in campaigns in the Zimbabwean War of Liberation, also called the Rhodesian Bush War.

1969

In 1969, Hani co-signed, with six others, the "Hani Memorandum", which was strongly critical of the leadership of Joe Modise, Moses Kotane and other comrades in the leadership.

In Lesotho, Hani organised guerrilla operations of the MK in South Africa.

1982

By 1982, he had become prominent enough to have become the target of assassination attempts, and he eventually moved to the ANC's headquarters in Lusaka, Zambia.

As head of Umkhonto we Sizwe, he was responsible for the suppression of a mutiny by dissident anti-Communist ANC members in detention camps, but denied any role in abuses including torture and murder.

Many MK female operatives, such as Dipuo Mvelase, adored Chris Hani for having protected women's rights and caring about their wellbeing at military camps.

1989

After the elections of 1989, it was the second-strongest party in the House of Assembly, after the National Party, and opposed F. W. de Klerk's dismantling of apartheid.

Historically, the assassination is seen as a turning point.

Serious tensions followed the assassination, with fears that the country would erupt in violence.

1991

Having spent time as a clandestine organiser in South Africa in the mid-1970s, he permanently returned to South Africa following the unbanning of the ANC in 1990, and took over from Joe Slovo as head of the South African Communist Party (SACP) on 8 December 1991.

He supported the suspension of the ANC's armed struggle in favour of negotiations.

1993

He was a fierce opponent of the apartheid government, and was assassinated by Janusz Waluś, a Polish immigrant and sympathiser of the Conservative opposition on 10 April 1993, during the unrest preceding the transition to democracy.

Chris Hani was assassinated on 10 April 1993 outside his home in Dawn Park, a racially mixed suburb of Boksburg.

He was accosted by a Polish far-right anti-communist immigrant named Janusz Waluś, who shot him as he stepped out of his car.

Waluś fled the scene but was soon arrested after Margareta Harmse, a white Afrikaner housewife, saw Waluś straight after the crime as she was driving past, and called the police.

A neighbour of Hani also witnessed the crime and later identified both Waluś, and the vehicle he was driving at the time.

Clive Derby-Lewis, a senior South African Conservative Party MP and Shadow Minister for Economic Affairs at the time, who had lent Waluś his pistol, was also arrested for complicity in Hani's murder.

The Conservative Party of South Africa had broken away from the ruling National Party out of opposition to the reforms of P. W. Botha.