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"It reads like a thriller page after page. . . . The loveliest of Hilda Bernstein's works about the ugliest of times."--Albie Sachs, "The Independent" "Were it not for ordinary heroes like the Bernsteins, South Africa would not be free today."--"Guardian" It was 1963 in South Africa during Apartheid when Lionel "Rusty" Bernstein was arrested, along with Nelson Mandela and fifteen other leaders of the African National Congress. They were charged with 221 acts of sabotage designed to "ferment violent revolution." Rusty was one of two individuals acquitted, and the rest received life sentences. In "The World that was Ours," his wife, Hilda Bernstein, offers an astonishing personal account of the events leading up to the "Rivonia Trial" and describes how, as a white family with four children, they managed to fight a hostile and unjust regime. "There was a long night ahead. We are unable to read. We listen all the time, listen for the sound of a car in anticipation that the police will come. If he is in the hands of the police, surely they will bring him to the house to search; they always raid after an arrest." Hilda Bernstein (1915-2006) lived in London, but in 1933 moved to South Africa where she married Lionel Bernstein. She was elected as a Communist to the Johannesburg City Council; helped found the multiracial Federation of South African Women; and worked closely with the African National Congress' Women's League in opposition to apartheid.
'This has survived as a South African classic not just because it's beautifully written,' wrote Anthony Sampson in the "Spectator", 'but because it conveys the combination of ordinariness and danger which is implicit in any totalitarian state.' "The World that was Ours" is about the events leading up to the 1964 Rivonia Trial when Hilda Bernstein's husband was acquitted but Mandela and the 'men of Rivonia' received life sentences. 'This passionately political memoir,' observed "The Times", 'is vibrant with the dilemmas of everyday family life, quick-witted dialogue, fast-paced adventure and novelistic detail.' Yet the political background is not dwelt on: it is simply taken for granted that civilised South Africans fought apartheid and the uncivilised propped it up. The main strength of the book is as an outstanding personal memoir; in this respect it bears comparison with autobiographies by Nadezhda Mandelstam and Christabel Bielenberg.
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