Tony Heard | |
Birth Name: | Anthony Hazlitt Heard |
Birth Date: | 20 November 1937 |
Birth Place: | Johannesburg, South Africa |
Death Place: | Cape Town, South Africa |
Nationality: | South African |
Genre: | Non-fiction |
Subject: | Apartheid |
Alma Mater: | University of Cape Town |
Education: | Durban High School |
Tony Heard, full name Anthony Hazlitt Heard, (20 November 1937 – 27 March 2024)[1] was a South African journalist, author and government advisor. He is best known for his journalism covering apartheid, most notably interviewing African National Congress (ANC) leader Oliver Tambo in 1985 at a time when it was banned by the South African government.[1] [2] [3] [4] After the country's transition to a new democratic South Africa, Heard became an adviser in the presidency, serving until 2010.[5]
He was born on 20 November 1937 in Johannesburg, South Africa, to George and Vida Heard (née Stodden), both journalists.[1] His brother, Raymond Heard, is a noted Canadian journalist. His father, George Arthur Heard, was a noted anti-fascist political journalist at a time when fascism was on the rise globally in the run-up to World War II. South Africa's entry into the war on the side of the Allies was controversial in country where significant pro-fascist feelings were present among Afrikaner nationalists. His father mysteriously disappeared in 1945; the Heard family believes he was murdered for his political beliefs.[2]
Heard matriculated from Durban Boys High in 1954, after which he spent a year in London learning shorthand and typing. In 1955 he returned to South Africa and started work as a journalist while studying journalism part-time at the University of Cape Town, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts.[2] [6] He married Valerie Joy Heard (née Hermanson), a graduate from the University of Cape Town's College of Music. They had two daughters, Vicki Sharon Heard (b. 26 July 1963, Cape Town) and Janet Elaine Heard (b. 11 July 1965, Cape Town), herself a well-known South African journalist. Heard later married Mary Ann Barker with whom he had two children, Pasqua Siobhan (now Lawrenson) and Dylan Skye Heard.
Following his return to South Africa in 1955, Heard was employed as a journalist at the Cape Times in Cape Town.[2] [6] He became a parliamentary reporter for the Cape Times in 1958 and then a political correspondent.[6]
Heard covered the anti-pass march in Langa, Cape Town, led by Pan Africanist Congress leader Philip Kgosana on 30 March 1960.[1] [6] He was appointed editor of the Cape Times in 1971.[6]
In 1985 Heard took leave and traveled to the United Kingdom where he interviewed the then banned leader of the ANC, Oliver Tambo.[6] [7]
His interview with Tambo was published in the Cape Times under the heading "A Conversation with Oliver Tambo of the ANC,” was an important event in South African history. It allowed the ANC to articulate its vision of a non-racial South Africa to the public, thereby alleviate fears held by White South Africans for a post-apartheid South Africa, and ultimately helped created the political conditions for the negotiated settlement that ended apartheid and established a non-racial democratic government.[2] [3] [8]
Following the interview Heard was arrested and released on bail for contravening the Internal Security Act with the case against him eventually being dropped by the government. He won the Golden Pen Award of Freedom from the World Association of Newspapers for the interview.[8]
In March 1986 Heard investigated and exposed the killing of seven anti-apartheid activists in Gugulethu known as the Gugulethu Seven.[6] Heard was sacked from the Cape Times in 1987 after refusing a R1 million (equivalent to R in) offer to resign that contained a clause that, Heard argued, would have effectively muzzled him following the Tambo interview.[9]
Following his departure from the Cape Times, Heard temporarily moved to the United States where he became a Nieman Fellow and was a Visiting Fulbright Fellow at University of Arkansas. After the transition to democracy, he served in the administration of Nelson Mandela as a senior official, first advising the Minister for Water Affairs, Kader Asmal and then later working in the presidency of the Thabo Mbeki administration.[2] [10] His journalist daughter, Janet, followed in his footsteps as a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 2009/2010.
Heard died in Cape Town following a brief illness on 27 March 2024.[1]