Michael Harmel
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7 February 1915
Ireland
Michael Harmel | |
|---|---|
| Born | Michael Alan Harmel 7 February 1915 |
| Died | 18 June 1974 (aged 59) |
| Citizenship | South Africa Ireland |
| Occupation | Anti-apartheid activist |
| Spouse | |
| Children | Barbara Harmel[1] |
| Part of a series on |
| Apartheid |
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Michael Alan Harmel OLG (7 February 1915 – 18 June 1974) was a South African anti-apartheid activist, journalist and editor. He was a political mentor and friend of Nelson Mandela. Harmel was a member of the Central Committee of the South African Communist Party and its leading theoretician.[2] He was honoured posthumously with the Order of Luthuli in 2013.[2]
Harmel was born in Doornfontein in Johannesburg to Irish Jewish immigrant parents.[3] His paternal grandfather, Michael Harmel came from the shtetl of Pikeliai in the Russian Empire (modern day Lithuania).[4] He married Michael's grandmother, Hannah Deborah (Dora), from Leckava and with whom he had seven children and one adoptive daughter.[4] The couple emigrated to Ireland in the early 1870s. One of the daughters, Michael's aunt, Molly Harmel, was also the mother of Michael's cousin, the Irish writer, Michael Sayers.[4]
Michael's Irish-born father, Arthur Aaron Harmel trained as a pharmacist in Dublin and emigrated to South Africa in 1910.[4][3] In Bulawayo in Southern Rhodesia, he married Sarah Landau, also from the Irish Jewish community and born to Polish Jewish parents.[3][4] Michael's mother, Sarah, died of Spanish flu when he was three years-old.[3] Michael was then raised by his father and aunt in the Orange Free State town of Vrede.[4] Michael later moved to East London with his father.[4] Michael attended the primary school of Selborne College in 1923.[4] The family then relocated to Port Elizabeth and Michael began attending Grey High School in 1924, matriculating in 1932.[4] In this period, Michael also had his Bar Mitzvah at Port Elizabeth Hebrew Congregation.[4]
He enrolled for a BA in English literature and Economics at Rhodes University in Grahamstown. He wrote poetry and literary reviews for The Rhodian, a bi-annual publication of submissions by Rhodes students.[4] He also founded and edited the short-lived publication, The Adelphi, billed as "A South African Monthly Review of Literature, Public Affairs and The Arts".[4]