Joyce Piliso-Seroke
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Joyce Piliso-Seroke | |
|---|---|
| Born | 11 July 1933 Crown Mines, Johannesburg, Transvaal (now Gauteng) |
| Education | University Education Diploma, South African Native College |
| Occupations | Educator, activist |
| Organization | World YWCA |
| Honours | Order of the Baobab in Gold, Order of Simon of Cyrene |
Joyce Piliso-Seroke (born 11 July 1933) is a South-African educator, activist, feminist and community organizer. A former vice president of the World YWCA, she traveled internationally to speak about the effects of apartheid, overcoming imprisonment and attempted censorship in her pursuit of justice and gender equality. She is a member of South Africa's national Order of the Baobab in Gold, and was appointed the first chair of the South African Commission for Gender Equality.
Piliso-Seroke was born on 11 July 1933 in Crown Mines, Johannesburg, Transvaal (now Gauteng).[1][2] Her father was a mine supervisor and her mother was a primary school teacher, and for several years Piliso-Seroke's mother was also her teacher at school. She encountered racism at a young age: when shopping with her family in Mayfair, white Afrikaner shopkeepers would address her mother as "girl". More than once, when Piliso-Seroke walked home with milk from the dairy, local white boys would set their dogs on her, laughing as she ran away.[3]
She graduated from Kilnerton High School in Pretoria.[1] Piliso-Seroke studied at the South African Native College at Fort Hare next, earning her University Education Diploma[1] in 1956. At the predominantly male school of Fort Hare, she learned to speak up for herself during meetings of the African National Congress Youth League, where she and other women students had to verbally support each other to overcome attempts at intimidation by the male students.[4]