R
aleigh Tabaka arrived in Cape Town while the Stander trial was still in progress. He came back the way he had left, as a crewman on a Liberian-registered tramp steamer.
His papers, although issued in the name of Goodwill Mhlazini, were genuine and he passed quickly through customs and immigration and with his bag over his shoulder walked up the foreshore to the main Cape Town railway station.
When he reached the Witwatersrand the following evening, he caught the bus out to Drake's Farm and went to the cottage where Victoria Gama was staying. Vicky opened the door and she had the child by the hand. There was the smell of cooking from the little kitchenette in the back.
She started violently as she saw him. âRaleigh, come in quickly.' She drew him into the cottage and bolted the door.
âYou shouldn't have come here. You know that I am banned. They watch this place,' she told him as she went quickly to the windows and drew the curtains. Then she came back to where he stood in the centre of the room and studied him.
âYou have changed,' she said softly. âYou are a man now.' The training and the discipline of the camps had left their mark. He stood straight and alert, and he seemed to exude an intensity and a force that reminded her of Moses Gama.
âHe has become one of the lions,' she thought, and she asked, âWhy have you come here, Raleigh, and how can I help you?'
âI have come to free Moses Gama from the prison of the Boers â and I will tell you how you can help me.'
Victoria gave a little cry of joy, and clutched the child closer to her. âTell me what to do,' she pleaded.
He would not stay to eat the evening meal with Victoria, would not even sit down on one of the cheap deal chairs.
âWhen is your next visit to Moses?' he asked in a low but powerful voice.
âIn eight days' time,' Victoria told him, and he nodded.
âYes, I knew it was soon. That was part of our planning. Now, here is what you must doâ'
When the prison launch ran out from Cape Town harbour, carrying Victoria and the child to exercise their six-monthly visiting rights, Raleigh Tabaka was on the deck of one of the crayfish trawlers that was moored alongside the repair wharf in the outer harbour. Raleigh was dressed like one of the trawlermen in a blue jersey, yellow plastic overalls and sea boots. He pretended to be working on the pile of crayfish pots on the foredeck, but he studied the ferry as it passed close alongside before it made the turn out through the entrance to the breakwater. He made out Victoria's regal figure in the stern. She was wearing her caftan in yellow, green and black, the colours of the ANC which always infuriated the jailers.
When the ferry had cleared the harbour and was set on course towards the low whale-backed profile of Robben Island far out in the bay, Raleigh walked back along the deck of the eighty-foot trawler to the wheelhouse.
The skipper of the trawler was a burly coloured man, dressed like Raleigh in jersey and waterproofs. Raleigh had met his son at the Lord Kitchener Hotel in London, an activist who had taken part in the Langa uprising and had fled the country immediately afterwards.
âThank you, comrade,' Raleigh said, and the skipper came to the door of the wheelhouse and took the black pipe from between his even white teeth.
âDid you find out what you wanted?'
âYes, comrade.'
âWhen will you need me for the next part?'
âWithin ten days,' Raleigh replied.
âYou must give me at least twenty-four hours' warning. I
have to get a permit from the Fisheries Department to work in the bay.'
Raleigh nodded. âI have planned for that.' He turned his head to look forward towards the trawler's bows. âIs your boat strong enough?' he asked.
âYou let me worry about that,' the skipper chuckled. âA boat that can live in the South Atlantic winter gales is strong enough for anything.' He handed Raleigh the small canvas airline bag that contained his street clothes. âWe will meet again soon then, my friend?'
âYou can be sure of that, comrade,' Raleigh said quietly and went up the gangplank onto the wharf.
Raleigh changed out of his trawlerman's gear in the public toilet near the harbour gates, and then went across to the carpark behind the customs house. Ramsami's old Toyota was parked up against the fence, and Raleigh climbed into the back seat.
Sammy Ramsami looked up from the copy of
The Cape Times
he was reading. He was a good-looking young Hindu lawyer who specialized in political cases. For the previous four years he had represented Vicky Gama in her neverending legal battle with authority, and he had accompanied her from the Transvaal on this visit to her husband.
âDid you get what you wanted?' he asked, and Raleigh grunted noncommittally.
âI don't want to know what this is all about,' Sammy Ramsami said, and Raleigh smiled coldly.
âDon't worry, comrade, you will not be burdened with that knowledge.'
They did not speak again, not for the next four hours while they waited for Vicky to return from the island. She came at last, tall and stately in her brilliant caftan and turban, the child beside her, and the coloured stevedores working on the dock recognized her and cheered her as she passed.
She came to the Toyota and climbed into the front seat with the child on her lap.
âHe is on another hunger strike,' she said. âHe has lost so much weight he looks like a skeleton.'
âThat will make our work a lot easier,' said Sammy Ramsami and he started the Toyota.
At nine o'clock the next morning Ramsami presented an urgent application to the Supreme Court for an order that a private physician be allowed access to the prisoner Moses Gama, and as grounds to support his application he presented the sworn affidavits of Victoria Dinizulu Gama and the local representative of the International Red Cross as to the deterioration in the prisoner's physical and mental condition.
The judge in chambers issued an order calling on the Minister of Justice to show cause within twenty-four hours why the access order should not be granted. The state attorney general opposed the application strenuously, but after listening to Mr Samuel Ramsami's submission, the judge granted the order.
The physician named in the order was Dr Chetty Abrahamji, the same man who had delivered Tara Courtney's son. He was a consulting physician at Groote Schuur Hospital. In company with the government district physician, Dr Abrahamji made the ferry trip out to Robben Island where for three hours he examined the prisoner in the prison clinic.
At the end of the examination he told the state doctor, âI don't like this at all. The patient is very much under weight, complaining of indigestion and chronic constipation. I don't have to spell out what those presentations suggest.'
âThose symptoms have been caused by the fact that the prisoner has been on a hunger strike. In fact I have been considering attempting to force-feed.'
âNo, Doctor,' Abrahamji interrupted him. âI see the
symptoms as much more significant. I am ordering a CAT scan.'
âThere are no facilities available for a CAT scan on the island.'
âThen he will have to be moved to Groote Schuur for the examination.'
Once again the state attorney general opposed the order for the prisoner to be moved from Robben Island to Groote Schuur Hospital, but the judge was influenced by Dr Abrahamji's written report and impressed by his verbal evidence and once again granted the order.
Moses Gama was brought to the mainland amid the strictest conditions of secrecy and security. No previous warning of the move was given to any person outside those directly involved, to prevent the organization of any form of demonstration by liberal political bodies, and to frustrate the intense desire of the press to obtain a photograph of this patriarch of black aspirations.
It was necessary, however, to give Dr Abrahamji twenty-four hours' advance notice to enable him to reserve the use of the test equipment at the hospital, and the police moved into the area of the hospital the evening before the transfer. They cleared the corridors and rooms through which the prisoner would move of all but essential hospital staff, and searched them for explosives or any indication of illegal preparations.
From the public telephone booth in the main hospital administration block Dr Abrahamji rang Raleigh Tabaka at Molly Broadhurst's house in Pinelands.
âI am expecting company at two o'clock tomorrow afternoon,' he said simply.
âYour guest must not leave you until after nightfall,' Raleigh replied.
âThat can be arranged,' Abrahamji agreed, and hung up.
The prison ferry came in through the harbour entrance at one o'clock in the afternoon. The deadlights of the cabin
portholes were closed, and there were armed prison warders on deck, fore and aft, and their vigilance was apparent, even from where Raleigh was working on the foredeck of the trawler.
The ferry sailed across the harbour to âA' berth, its usual mooring. There was an armoured prison van waiting on the dock, with four motor-cycle police in uniform and a grey police Land-Rover. Through the riot screens on the cab of the Land-Rover Raleigh could make out the shape of helmets and the short thick barrels of automatic shotguns held at port arms.
As the ferry touched the wharf, the prison van reversed up and the rear doors swung open. The armed warders seated on the padded benches in the body of the truck jumped down to meet the prisoner. Raleigh had just a glimpse of a tall gaunt figure in plain prison khaki uniform as he was hustled up the gangplank and into the waiting van, but even across the width of the harbour basin he could see that Moses Gama's hair was now pure silvery white, and that he was manacled at the wrists and that heavy leg-irons hampered his gait.
The doors of the van slammed shut. The motor-cycle escort closed information around it and the Land-Rover followed closely behind it as it sped away towards the main dock gates.
Raleigh left the trawler and Molly Broadhurst was waiting for him beyond the main gates. They drove up the lower slopes of Table Mountain to where the hospital stood, a massive complex of white walls and red clay tiles below the stone pines and open meadows of Rhodes Estate and the tall grey rock buttresses of the mountain itself. Raleigh made a careful note of the time required for the journey from the docks to the hospital.
They drove slowly up the busy road to the main entrance of the hospital. The police Land-Rover, motor-cycles and
armoured van were lined up in the public carpark beyond the entrance to the out-patients section. The warders had doffed their riot helmets and were standing around the vehicles in relaxed attitudes.
âHow will Abrahamji keep him there until dark?' Molly wanted to know.
âI did not ask,' Raleigh replied. âI expect he will keep on demanding further tests, or will deliberately sabotage the machinery â I don't know.'
Raleigh turned the car in a circle in front of the main entrance and they drove back down the hill.
âYou are sure there is no other way to leave the hospital grounds?' Raleigh asked.
âQuite sure,' Molly replied. âThe van must pass here. Drop me at the bus stop. It will be a long wait and at least I will have a bench to sit on.'
Raleigh pulled into the kerb. âYou have the number of the telephone on the dock, and coins?' She nodded.
âWhere is your nearest telephone from here?' he insisted.
âI have checked it all carefully. There is a public phone booth at the corner.' She pointed. âIt will take two minutes for me to reach it, and if it is out of order or occupied, there is another telephone in the café across the street. I have already made friends with the proprietor.'
Raleigh left her at the bus stop and drove back to the centre of town. He left Molly's car in the side street they had agreed upon so that it would not be found at the docks or anywhere in the vicinity and he walked back down the Heerengracht showing his seaman's papers at the gate.
The skipper of the trawler was in the wheelhouse and he handed Raleigh a mug of heavily sweetened coffee which he sipped as they went over the final arrangements.
âAre my men ready?' Raleigh asked as he stood up, and the skipper shrugged. âThat is your business, not mine.'
They were in the bottom of the trawler's deep hold
where the heat in the unventilated space was oppressive. Robert and Changi were stripped to vests and jogging shorts. They jumped up as Raleigh came down the ladder.
âSo far it goes well,' Raleigh assured them. They were old companions from the PAC
Poqo
days, and Changi had been at Sharpeville on the terrible day that Amelia died.
âAre you ready?' Raleigh asked him.
âWe can check,' Changi suggested. âOnce more will not hurt us.'