• Source: Ronald Segal
    • Ronald Michael Segal (14 July 1932 – 23 February 2008) was a South African activist, writer and editor, founder of the anti-apartheid magazine Africa South and the Penguin African Library.


      Life


      Ronald Segal was born on 14 July 1932, into a rich South African Jewish family. He was educated at Sea Point Boys' High School. After failing to gain entry to Oxford University, he studied at Cape Town University and then Trinity College, Cambridge.
      Returning to South Africa in 1956, he founded the anti-apartheid magazine Africa South. After the 1960 Sharpeville massacre, he went into exile with Oliver Tambo, and settled in England, continuing his anti-apartheid political activity and pursuing activity as a writer. Segal's best-known work is The State of the World Atlas (first edition, 1981), which he co-founded with Michael Kidron, another South African-born Jew, who shared most of his political views.
      After Segal was unbanned from South Africa, he visited the country several times, receiving a hero's welcome on stage alongside Mandela, Tambo and Slovo in 1992. Segal died on 23 February 2008.


      Works


      Tokolosh of the Townships, 1960 [3]
      Political Africa: A Who’s Who of Personalities and Parties, 1961
      African Profiles, 1962
      Into Exile, 1963
      Sanctions against South Africa, 1964
      The Anguish of India, 1965
      The Race War: The Worldwide Conflict of Races, 1966
      America’s Receding Future
      The Americans: A Conflict of Creed and Reality, 1969
      The Struggle Against History, 1971
      Whose Jerusalem? The Conflicts of Israel, 1973
      Decline and Fall of the American Dollar, 1974
      Southern Africa: New Politics of Revolution, 1976
      Leon Trotsky: a biography, 1979
      (with Michael Kidron) The State of the World Atlas, 1981
      The Black Diaspora, 1995
      Islam's Black Slaves: The Other Black Diaspora, 2001


      References

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