Early Life:
Di
Bishop was born in Cape Town. She made her first political statement
at age eleven in 1961 when South Africa became a republic. During the
celebrations, she refused to attend a military display, influencing
her other siblings to do the same and this was punishable in her father’s
eyes. Di obtained an Honours Degree in Social Work and worked as a
social worker for many years. After getting married in 1975, her husband,
Brian introduced her to the Black
Sash movement. In the Black Sash
she was involved in monitoring the Langa Pass Law court, believing
that their presence would expose the injustice that accompanied Pass
Laws.
Political Career:
In
1981 she was elected a member of the Provincial Council for the Progressive
Federal Party.
She was asked by the Cape administrator to leave her position
in the Black Sash but she chose not to. Throughout the 1980s, Di became
involved in tracking down missing persons, who had disappeared from squatter
camps. In 1981, after she and a friend were found in a Port Elizabeth
township without permits, Di was arrested for the first time. In 1985,
during the State of Emergency, she was picked up once again in an “off-limits” area
but was release when they discovered that the person in her company was
in fact an American judge. |
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