Eddie Roux Explained

Eddie Roux
Honorific Suffix:OIS
Birth Name:Edward Roux
Birth Date:24 April 1903
Birth Place:Transvaal Colony
Death Place:Johannesburg, South Africa
Nationality:South African
Education:PhD
Alma Mater:Downing College, University of Cambridge
Occupation:Botanist
Years Active:1929 - 1964
Credits:, which produces label "Notable credit(s)"; or by
Works:, which produces label "Works"; or by
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Office:may be used as an alternative when the label is better rendered as "Office" (e.g. public office or appointments) -->
Spouse:Winifred Lunt
Father:Phillip Roux

Eddie Roux (24 April 1903 2 March 1966) was a Transvaal Colony-born botanist, academic, writer, member of the South African Communist Party and anti-apartheid activist.

Early life

He was born Edward Roux to Afrikaner father Phillip R. Roux, a pharmacist and botanist, who was involved in the Labour Party and English mother, Edith May Wilson.[1] [2] He grew up in Bezuidenhout Valley, Johannesburg. Roux's political view were further inspired by the events of the 1917 Russian Revolution. After matriculating at Jeppe High School, he enrolled at the University of Witwatersrand and studied botany and zoology.[1] [2] At university, he joined in demonstrations against Jan Smuts' policies and met Sidney Bunting, later a leading member of the new South African Communist Party.[1] In 1925, he would obtain an honour's degree in Biology and a scholarship to Cambridge University.[1] From 1926, he was studying at Downing College, Cambridge.[1] He completed his PhD at Cambridge in 1929 and then returned to South Africa.[1] After failing to obtain a position at the University of Fort Hare mainly due to his non-religious views, his old lecturer Charles Moss helped him obtain a research position at the Department of Agriculture's, Low Temperature Research Laboratory in Cape Town.[1] He was dismissed from that position in 1929 after joining demonstrations conducted by the African National Congress (ANC).[1]

Political life

At the University of Witwatersrand, he would be an early member of the South African Communist Party (SACP).[1] Roux, in 1924, as a member of the Communist Youth League, would support Buttings' effort to move the SACP towards recruiting black workers.[3] His political views were further moulded by the events of the 1922 Rand Rebellion.[1] At Cambridge University his view were moulded by Frederick Frost Blackman a left-wing lecturer and the latter National Union of Scientific Workers and he also joined the communist Labour Club and debated at the Heretics group.[1] While in Europe, he attended the Sixth Congress of Communist International in 1928 in Moscow with Bunting and his wife.[1] [4] In 1929, he met Lancelot Hogben a biology professor at the University of Cape Town, a supporter of communism and who held meetings at his home with black activists.[1] In 1930, he returned to Johannesburg and became part of the SACP's leadership and editor of its weekly paper Umsebnzi.[1] Following Stalinist purging of the SACP during the New Line and its movement away from the black liberation struggle, he was expelled in 1936 because of his support for League of South African Rights and the Black Republic which were contrary to a Stalinist centralised approach to the movement.[1] Without a job at the SACP nor the prospect of an academic career, he became a municipal pool cleaner.[1]

Later academic career

Through Izak Donen at the University of Cape Town, he obtained a research position in 1937 which led to, with another colleague, the discovery of higher levels of Vitamin A in certain South African fish livers.[1] His colleague would form a private company to monetise the new research and would fund Roux's research.[1] He would write several books, including a dictionary of socialist terms translated into African languages, a biography of Sidney Bunting and several articles and academic textbooks concerning biology.[1] [5] In order to improved language skills amongst Black people, he published a book in 1938 called Easy English for Africans.[6] In 1948, he joined the University of the Witwatersrand's Frakenwald Research Station at the invitation of John Phillips and researched vitamins, potatoes, antibiotics, herbicides and grassland ecology.[1] [7] In 1962, he was granted a professorship at the university.[1]

Later politics

With the National Party winning control of the South African government after the 1948 election, they began to introduce Apartheid laws. Due to the Suppression of Communism Act of 1950, when Roux applied for a passport to travel Africa in 1959, it was rejected due to his past sympathies.[1] From 1957 until 1962, Roux was a member of the Liberal Party.[1] He joined because the party's membership was open to all races.[8] Roux was eventually subjected to a banning order by Justice Minister John Vorster on 15 December 1964, preventing him from teaching or entering a university and it also included his academic books and articles, after he refused to name communist members of SACP even though he had not been a member since 1936.[1] [9] Students, as well as local and international academics, would protest against Roux's banning order.[1]

Marriage

He would marry Winifred Mary Lunt whom he had met through Lancelot Hogben.[1]

Death

He died suddenly in March 1966.[1]

Honours

Roux was awarded a posthumous Order of Ikhamanga, silver class, by the South African government in 2007.[10]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Anker. Peder. 2004. The Politics of Ecology in South Africa on the Radical Left. Journal of the History of Biology. 37. 2. 303–331. 0022-5010. 4331876. 10.1023/B:HIST.0000038258.63985.aa. 84723663.
  2. Web site: Historical Papers, Wits University - Roux Collection. www.historicalpapers.wits.ac.za. 2019-05-10.
  3. Drew. Allison. 2003. Bolshevizing Communist Parties: The Algerian and South African Experiences. International Review of Social History. 48. 2. 167–202. 0020-8590. 44582754. 10.1017/S0020859003001007. free.
  4. Campbell. James T.. 1998. Hirson. Baruch. Williams. Gwyn A.. Roux. Edward. Romantic Revolutionaries: David Ivon Jones, S. P. Bunting and the Origins of Non-Racial Politics in South Africa. The Journal of African History. 39. 2. 313–328. 0021-8537. 183601. 10.1017/S0021853798007208.
  5. Drew. Allison. 2003. Will the Real Sidney Bunting Please Stand up? Constructing and Contesting the Identity of a South African Communist. The English Historical Review. 118. 479. 1208–1241. 0013-8266. 3490591. 10.1093/ehr/118.479.1208.
  6. Trimbur. John. 2009. Popular Literacy and the Resources of Print Culturer:The South African Committee for Higher Education. College Composition and Communication. 61. 1. 85–108. 0010-096X. 40593516.
  7. Bennett. Brett M.. 2013. The Rise and Demise of South Africa's First School of Forestry. Environment and History. 19. 1. 63–85. 0967-3407. 43298473. 10.3197/096734013X13528328439072.
  8. Dubow. Saul. 2014. Uncovering the Historic Strands of Egalitarian Liberalism in South Africa. Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory. 61. 140. 7–24. 10.3167/th.2014.6114002. 0040-5817. 24719978.
  9. Merrett. Christopher. 1990. In a State of Emergency: Libraries and Government Control in South Africa. The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy. 60. 1. 1–22. 0024-2519. 4308429. 10.1086/602184. 143408766.
  10. Web site: The Order of Ikhamanga. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170508080152/http://www.thepresidency.gov.za/national-orders/order-ikhamanga-0 . 2017-05-08 . 24 December 2020. The Presidency Republic of South Africa.