Jeremy Patrick Cronin | |
---|---|
Deputy Minister of Public Works | |
In office 12 June 2012 –June 2019 | |
President | Cyril Ramaphosa |
Deputy Minister of Transport | |
In office 11 May 2009 –12 June 2012 | |
President | Jacob Zuma |
Succeeded by | Lydia Sindiswe Chikunga |
Personal details | |
Born | 12 September 1949 |
Nationality | South African |
Political party | South African Communist Party |
Other political affiliations | African National Congress |
Residence(s) | Cape Town,South Africa |
Alma mater | University of Cape Town (BA) Sorbonne University (MA) |
Jeremy Patrick Cronin (born 12 September 1949) is a South African writer,author,and noted poet. A longtime activist in politics,Cronin is a member of the South African Communist Party and a former member of the National Executive Committee of the African National Congress. [1] He served as the South African Deputy Minister of Public Works from 2012 until his retirement in 2019. [2]
Cronin was brought up in a White middle-class Roman Catholic family in Rondebosch in Cape Town,South Africa. During adolescence,he considered the idea of entering the priesthood. After a year's military service,when he was conscripted in the South African Navy,Cronin won a bursary to study at the University of Cape Town in 1968;there he became a member of the Radical Student Society and was subsequently recruited into then-banned South African Communist Party (SACP).
In the early 1970s,Cronin studied for his Master's degree in Philosophy in France and returned to South Africa,where he began lecturing in the Philosophy department at the University of Cape Town.
Cronin's work in the propaganda unit of the SACP brought him to the attention of the South African Bureau of State Security;he was arrested on charges under the Terrorism and Internal Security Acts and tried in the Cape Town Supreme Court in September 1976,along with David Rabkin and his wife Sue. [3] The charges included conspiring with members of the African National Congress (also a banned organisation) and the SACP,and preparing and distributing pamphlets on these organisations' behalf (activities commemorated in Cronin's poem "A Step Away from Them," modelled on a poem of the same title by American poet Frank O'Hara). Cronin pleaded guilty to all charges and was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment (1976–1983). [1] He served his time in Pretoria Local,or Pretoria Prison,which was part of the Pretoria Central Prison complex,along with Denis Goldberg,Raymond Suttner and others. He participated in the planning of a daring escape in 1979 by Tim Jenkin,Stephen Lee and Alex Moumbaris. [3] His wife Anne Marie died of a brain tumour during his imprisonment. [4]
Cronin's first book of poetry,Inside,was published in 1984 following his release from prison. [5] Subsequent volumes include Even the Dead (1997) and Inside and Out (1999). His most recent collection,More Than A Casual Contact,was published in 2006. Among his best known poems is "Motho Ke Motho Ka Batho Babang",whose title is taken from the Sotho aphorism "A person is a person because of other people".
Following Cronin's release from prison he began working with the United Democratic Front (UDF),founded in 1983,where he worked as the editor of its theoretical journal Isizwe (The Nation) . He was also involved in various kinds of popular education,but in the late 1980s,increased harassment from the security forces forced him and his wife to leave South Africa and move first to London,then to Lusaka in Zambia,where he worked closely with Joe Slovo for the ANC/SACP alliance. In the 1990s,he worked in the SACP head office in Johannesburg,where he was deputy general secretary of the party. He became a member of parliament in 1999. His interviews with Helena Sheehan [6] in 2001 and 2002 met with a storm of controversy,because of his left critique of the ANC during the presidency of Thabo Mbeki. He was forced to apologise to the ANC in 2002. [7] He delivered the Chris Hani memorial lecture,titled Why South Africa will never be like Zimbabwe,in Durban on 4 May 2008. [8] On 10 May 2009,President Jacob Zuma appointed him Deputy Minister of Transport,and in 2012 he moved to become Deputy Minister of Public Works. In May 2019,he retired from parliament and government office.
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