Party: | Inkatha Freedom Party |
Office1: | Member of the National Assembly |
Termstart1: | 1997 |
Termend1: | May 2009 |
Birth Date: | 9 October 1943 |
Office2: | Member of the Senate |
Termstart2: | May 1994 |
Termend2: | 1997 |
Constituency Am2: | KwaZulu-Natal |
Alma Mater: | University of the Witwatersrand (MBBCh) |
Birth Place: | Springs, Transvaal Union of South Africa |
Ruth Rabinowitz (; born 9 October 1943) is a South African politician and medical doctor who represented the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) in Parliament from 1994 to 2009. She served in the Senate from 1994 to 1997 as a delegate from KwaZulu-Natal, and thereafter she was a member of the National Assembly.
A doctor by profession, Rabinowitz became involved in political activism during the democratic transition as a supporter of federal proposals for post-apartheid South Africa. Through her activism, she encountered Mangosuthu Buthelezi and his party, the IFP, which nominated her as a candidate in the 1994 general election, South Africa's first under universal suffrage. Throughout her three terms in Parliament, Rabinowitz served as the IFP's spokesperson on health and was a consistent critic of President Thabo Mbeki's HIV/AIDS policies. During her third term, she established a non-partisan grouping of MPs to lobby for improved policymaking on renewable energy. She failed to gain re-election in the 2009 general election.
Rabinowitz was born on 9 October 1943[1] in Springs in the former Transvaal.[2] She is Jewish and the daughter of Lithuanian immigrants.[3] She completed a MBBCh from Witwatersrand University, as well as a diploma in drama teaching from the London Academy of Dramatic Arts. She is a medical doctor by profession, and also practices homeopathic medicine.[4]
After her children finished school and moved overseas, during the early stages of South Africa's democratic transition, Rabinowitz became active in political activism, working under the Democracy Trust to lobby for a federal constitution in post-apartheid South Africa. Her relationship with Mangosuthu Buthelezi of Inkatha (later the IFP) began when he sent her a letter to thank her for her activism.
In South Africa's first post-apartheid elections in 1994, Rabinowitz stood as a candidate on the party list of Buthelezi's IFP. According to Rabinowitz, she was not a member of the IFP at the time and did not intend to go into politics, but accepted an invitation to appear on the party list in order to signal her "endorsement" of the party. She was nonetheless elected off the IFP's list to represent the KwaZulu-Natal constituency in the Senate, the upper house of the new South African Parliament.[5]
In the middle of the legislative term, in 1997, Rabinowitz was transferred to the National Assembly, the lower parliamentary house,[6] where she filled a casual vacancy arising from Walter Felgate's resignation. According to Rabinowitz, she had been deeply disappointed with the content of the final post-apartheid Constitution, adopted in 1996, and, while taking sick leave, had told the IFP that she was not prepared to return to the Senate under the new Constitution, which she believed disempowered the upper house.
Rabinowitz remained in the National Assembly until 2009, gaining election full consecutive terms in 1999 and 2004;[7] she stood as a candidate on the IFP's national party list. In December 2000, Rabinowitz was one of the prominent white figures who signed an open letter which admitted white complicity in apartheid, acknowledged its harms, and acknowledged a "debt to fellow black South Africans", committing the signatories to promoting redress.[8]
Throughout her tenure in Parliament, Rabinowitz served as the IFP's parliamentary spokesman on health, a position she had held since 1994.[9] In that capacity, she was a consistent critic of President Thabo Mbeki's unscientific policies during the HIV/AIDS epidemic.[10] [11] [12] In 2003, she called for doctors to boycott the government's AIDS policy "so that we are not found guilty of complicity with genocide";[13] In 2005, she said that Mbeki had a "denialist attitude" towards the epidemic.[14] She also argued for greater recognition of practitioners of indigenous medicine.[15]
During her third term in Parliament, Rabinowitz formed a multi-party lobby, the e-Parliament Renewable Energy Activists, which lobbied government to develop a progressive renewable energy policy.[16] In November 2008, the group introduced a private member's bill on feed-in tariffs, sponsored by Rabinowitz, which led the government to promise that it would propose its own strategy within months.[17]
Although Rabinowitz had been in the IFP's ten highest-ranked national candidates in the 2004 election,[18] she was demoted from the party list in the 2009 general election and did not secure re-election to her seat.[19]
Rabinowitz married one of her university professors, a surgeon at Baragwanath Hospital in Johannesburg; they had three children.