E. S. Reddy:

 

Behind the Scenes at the United Nations

 

>From "No Easy Victories"

 

 

E. S. Reddy made the U.N. Centre Against Apartheid an indispensable resource
for the anti-apartheid movement.

 

Coming to the United States from India in 1946, E. S. Reddy was both a
witness to and an important participant in the international struggle to end
apartheid in South Africa. He went to work for the United Nations
Secretariat in 1949 and served there for 35 years. 

 

>From 1963 to 1984 Reddy was the U.N. official in charge of action against
apartheid, first as principal secretary of the Special Committee Against
Apartheid and then as director of the Centre against Apartheid.

 

E.S.Reddy.jpg

E S Reddy

 

United Nations action both legitimated and was influenced by the momentum of
popular mobilization against apartheid. Reddy was probably the most
consistent and influential of the U.N. officials working behind the scenes,
ensuring that the United Nations not only represented governments but also
helped build bridges between liberation movements and their supporters in
the United States and other countries.

 

Inspired by his own country's struggle for independence, he first connected
to Africa through the Council on African Affairs in New York. Later, when
African countries gained influence at the United Nations, he was able to use
his position in the Secretariat to work closely with the American Committee
on Africa and Episcopal Churchmen for South Africa in New York, and with
other groups around the United States and around the world.

 

E. S. Reddy spoke with Lisa Brock in New York City on July 20, 2004.

 

E. S. Reddy

 

I was already interested in the anti-apartheid movement in the 1940s, when
the struggle in South Africa took on new forms and Indians and Africans were
cooperating in the struggle. During the Second World War, the United States
and Britain talked about four freedoms in the Atlantic Charter, but those
freedoms didn't apply to India or South Africa. As Indians we were very much
interested in South Africa, because a lot of Indians were there and they
were treated as second-class citizens or worse. And of course Nehru was
talking about South Africa, Gandhi was talking about South Africa and so on.

 

I arrived in New York in 1946, shortly before the Indian passive resistance
and the African mine labor strike in South Africa. I learned from a friend
that there was a Council on African Affairs in New York with a library that
got newspapers from South Africa. So I began to go to the council almost
every week and look at the newspapers. That is how I met Dr. Alphaeus
Hunton, a very fine man. He was head of research at the council at that
time, later executive director. We became good friends.

 

In June 1946, India complained to the United Nations about racial
discrimination against Indians in South Africa and the matter was discussed
in November and December of that year. A delegation led by Dr. A. B. Xuma,
president-general of the African National Congress, came from South Africa
to advise the Indian delegation and lobby the United Nations. Paul Robeson,
who was chairman of the Council on African Affairs, hosted a reception for
them and I met the delegation. The council organized a demonstration in
front of the South African consulate in New York. I was in contact with the
council, and took a group of Indian students to join the demonstration.

 

UN Logo.png

 

When the Indian delegation came to the United Nations in '46 for the first
time - the free Indian delegation - they said the main issues in the world
for us are colonialism and racism. They were not interested in the Cold War.
India felt very strongly about discrimination in South Africa, and also took
up the question of South West Africa [Namibia]. It not only tried to get
support from other countries, but tried to build up support from the public,
especially in Britain and the United States.

 

All those who supported India's freedom now began to support African
freedom, because solidarity can easily be transferred when the basic issue
is freedom. The people who were in the solidarity movement for South Africa
in those early days were mostly the people who were in the solidarity
movement with India.

 

In 1952, after the African National Congress decided on the Defiance
Campaign, India and some Asian and African countries got together and asked
the United Nations to discuss the whole question of apartheid. By that time
I was working in the U.N. Secretariat, and my boss called me in for a chat.
He said, "Don't you think it's illegal to bring that up? It's an internal
problem." So I said, "No, I don't think so. I think it's a matter of how you
interpret the charter." Because you know when the U.N. charter was signed,
the real India was not there. And we had a different attitude towards the
charter than some of the Western countries; it's a psychological thing. He
didn't like that at all. He said I was prejudiced, not objective. Supposedly
U.N. staff should be objective, neutral and all that sort of thing. So he
moved me from research on South Africa to the Middle East.

 

The atmosphere in the U.N. was terrible for many years, until the sixties.
It changed after many African countries became independent and joined the
United Nations. Third World countries became a majority. So the situation
was much better when the Special Committee Against Apartheid was established
and I was appointed secretary.

 

The Western countries refused to join the Special Committee. As a result,
all the members and I thought alike. Not only were we against apartheid, but
we supported the liberation struggle and opposed Western collaboration with
South Africa. The members of the committee, who were delegates of
governments, and I could work together as one team. That could not happen in
other committees where the members were divided and the Secretariat was
supposed to be neutral.

 

Coming from India, with the influence of Gandhi and Nehru, I felt that we
had a duty not only to get India's freedom, but to make sure that India's
freedom would be the beginning of the end of colonialism. Rightly or
wrongly, I had a feeling that I had not made enough sacrifice for India's
freedom, so I should compensate by doing what I could for the rest of the
colonies. That feeling was in the back of my mind.

 

The real opportunity came when I was appointed secretary of the Committee
against Apartheid in 1963. Other officials were not interested, as they felt
the committee was worthless. I wanted to give the best I could and I did for
more than 20 years.

 

Diallo Telli.jpg

Diallo Telli, 1925-1977, first Secretary-General of the OAU

 

Soon after the committee was formed, we had a private meeting of the
officers. I explained to them what I knew of the situation in South Africa
and what I thought the committee and the United Nations could do. The
chairman was Diallo Telli from Guinea, who later became secretary general of
the Organization of African Unity. He liked my presentation, and said,
"Look, Mr. Reddy, we are small delegations, we are terribly busy with so
many things, so many issues, documents and meetings and so on. We don't have
the time or the staff to do research. So you study the situation, you
propose to us what we should do, and we'll say yes or no."

 

So our relationship developed into tremendous confidence. Most of the
resolutions were written by me. Reports were written by me. Even speeches
were written by me for many years. But I can't claim too much credit because
nothing would have happened unless the chairman and other members took the
responsibility and made the necessary decisions.

 

And I told them, "Look, I'm a very junior official in the U.N., so there is
a limit to what I can do. I will get into trouble if it gets known that I
did this or that. You have to take the responsibility for everything." That
they very loyally did. And of course they obtained credit for all that I
quietly and often secretly helped them in doing. So with their protection I
was able, for instance, to discuss with the liberation movements about their
needs and the possibilities in the United Nations, contact anti-apartheid
groups and seek their advice and help, and propose initiatives for the
Special Committee.

 

I was very lucky that I had a job doing something I believed in; it has
given me a lot of satisfaction. In the course of my work, I was able not
only to help the liberation movements, but to develop closest cooperation
with anti-apartheid groups because their activities in promoting public
opinion and public action against apartheid were crucial for the
effectiveness of the United Nations.

 

It could have been an extremely frustrating job because whatever we did,
repression was getting worse in South Africa year after year and people were
suffering. But I was not frustrated.

 

Once a proposal I suggested did not get enough support and I was depressed.
Robert Resha, a leader of the African National Congress, was with me. He
said, "E. S., why are you frustrated? We are not frustrated. It's none of
your business to be frustrated. We are going to win." So I kept that in
mind.

 

We were able to win small victories and help people. For instance, we set up
a fund for scholarships, we set up a fund to help the political prisoners
and their families. And they developed into big things. Thousands of South
Africans got scholarships. The fund for the prisoners was my idea. And
millions of dollars started coming in after a while. Every day we could see
that this fund was helping a prisoner or his family, financing defense in a
trial and so on. We could derive some satisfaction from what we could do. So
we had faith that we were going to win, and that faith never left me.

 

 

.    The above text is excerpted from No Easy Victories for web presentation
on allAfrica.com <http://allafrica.com/>  and noeasyvictories.org. This text
may be freely reproduced if credit is given to No Easy Victories. Please
mention that the book is available from http://www.noeasyvictories.org
<http://www.noeasyvictories.org/>  and http://www.africaworldpressbooks.com
<http://www.africaworldpressbooks.com/> .

 

 

From: http://www.noeasyvictories.org/select/02_reddy.php

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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