The South African Nobel Prize-winning author Nadine Gordimer has
died in Johannesburg aged 90. The writer, who was one of the literary world's most
powerful voices against apartheid - died at her home after a short illness, her
family said.
She wrote more than 30 books, including the novels My Son's
Story, Burger's Daughter and July's People.
She jointly won 1974's Booker Prize for The Conservationist
and was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1991.
'She cared most deeply'
The Nobel committee said at the time it was honouring
Gordimer for her "magnificent epic writing" which had been "of
very great benefit to humanity".
Fellow acclaimed South African author JM Coetzee, whose
novels often focused on their country post-apartheid, said Gordimer
"responded with exemplary courage and creative energy to the great
challenge of her times, the system of apartheid unjustly imposed and
heartlessly implemented on the South African people".
He told the BBC: "Looking to the great realist
novelists of the 19th Century as models, she produced a body of work in which the
South Africa of the late 20th Century is indelibly recorded for all time."
The daughter of a Lithuanian Jewish watchmaker, Gordimer
began writing from an early age. She published her first story - Come Again
Tomorrow - in a Johannesburg magazine at just 15.
Her works comprised both novels and short stories where the
consequences of apartheid, exile and alienation were the major themes.
Gordimer's family said she "cared most deeply about
South Africa, its culture, its people, and its ongoing struggle to realise its
new democracy".
Committed to fighting apartheid, the author was a leading
member of the African National Congress (ANC) and fought for the release of
Nelson Mandela.
They went on to become firm friends and she edited Mandela's
famous I Am Prepared To Die speech, which he gave as a defendant during his
1962 trial.
The Nelson Mandela Foundation paid tribute to Gordimer,
saying it was "deeply saddened at the loss of South Africa's grande dame
of literature".
"We have lost a great writer, a patriot and strong
voice for equality and democracy in the world," it added.
A number of Gordimer's books were banned by the South
African government under the apartheid regime including 1966's The Late
Bourgeois World and 1979's Burger's Daughter.
Her last novel, No Time Like the Present, published in 2012,
follows veterans of the battle against apartheid as they deal with the issues
facing modern South Africa.
Despite her hatred of apartheid, the author was proud of her
heritage and said she only considered emigrating once - to nearby Zambia.
"Then I discovered the truth, which was that in Zambia
I was regarded by black friends as a European, a stranger," she said.
"It is only here that I can be what I am: a white
African."
In her later years, Gordimer became a vocal campaigner in
the HIV/Aids movement, lobbying and fund-raising on behalf of the Treatment
Action Campaign, a group pushing for the South African Government to provide
free, life-saving drugs to sufferers.
She was also critical of South African President Jacob Zuma,
expressing her opposition to a proposed law which would limit the publication
of information deemed sensitive by the government.
"The reintroduction of censorship is unthinkable when
you think how people suffered to get rid of censorship in all its forms,"
she said in an interview last month.
Source: BBC
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