South Africa in the 1980’s was known as the beautiful golden paradise perched on the tip of the African continent. But the beauty and allure of that country masked a brutal, racist and much hated apartheid policy perpetrated by the White South African regime. Many who had opposed it - mostly Blacks - paid for their struggles with their own lives.
Within the privileged White community emerged a “very ordinary” woman who was to play an extraordinary role in fighting apartheid. In her memoir “Burned: The Spy South Africa Never Caught”, Sue Dobson provides a true account of her role as a “soldier in the war against apartheid" - as she puts it - and it has taken her over thirty years to share this incredible story.
Raised in a dysfunctional family, and hardly able to cope with her mentally ill mother, Dobson found comfort as a teenager in her tiny transistor radio, which served as a gateway into another world and gave her hope for a better future. As she grew and learned, and having witnessed how the Blacks in her country were being mistreated, she began to realise that racial equality was a value to be cherished. So she determined then that she would work towards this goal.
Dobson recounts how she became involved with the ANC, a liberation movement known for its opposition to apartheid. Desperately wanting to join the ANC, she met a senior ANC official and recruiter in London in 1981. Instead of accepting her to be a member, he asked her to go back to South Africa and create a legend for herself and live it by blending herself into the society. Although disappointed, she took the advice. She began to work undercover as a journalist for a pro-apartheid tabloid and then as a news writer for a government broadcaster. Then, in 1986 after a crucial meeting with a very senior member of the ANC, she finally got accepted into the organisation and was immediately enlisted for espionage and military training for a year in Moscow.
Back in South Africa after the training, Dobson’s real job as an ANC spy began. Continuing to live the legend, her brief was to get as close to the government as she possibly could. She passed security clearance to work as a writer and translator for the government’s Information Bureau. Through it she had access to the Minister for Internal Affairs and even interviewed the Foreign Minister.
Over several months, she had a honey-pot affair with a police official, who confided information that she passed to the ANC. It was during this time, and when she was part of the ‘dirty tricks’ team sent to Namibia to derail its independence process, that she realised her cover was blown. This discovery quickly set in motion her desperate flight through Southern Africa with the South African security forces hot on her heels. Upon arrest she could face up to 15 years in prison and brutal torture for treason.
I don’t recall that I’ve read a memoir of a former spy. Dobson’s is probably the first, and I find it refreshing, captivating and riveting. She’s put her heart and soul into a coming-in-from-the-cold account that is intensely personal and vulnerable. In it she talks honestly about her dysfunctional family, her privileged race, the mistreatment of the Blacks, and about being the betrayer and the betrayed, besides her role as a spy. It is also peppered with horror stories of killings of prominent members of the ANC and brutal persecutions of those who fought for the anti-apartheid cause. It certainly brought about an acute awareness in me of how racist and brutal the apartheid regime was and why it was necessary to dismantle it.
Dobson played her part in getting rid of apartheid and making South Africa a better country. Her memoir is a commendable testament of her untiring efforts.
I received an advance review copy from Booksirens for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily