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Rahima Moosa

Rahima Moosa
Rahima Moosa.jpg
Born (1922-10-14)October 14, 1922
The Strand, Cape Town
Died May 29, 1993(1993-05-29) (aged 70)
Nationality South African
Occupation Activist
Known for National uprising of women in 1956
Political party African National Congress
Children 4

Rahima Moosa (14 October 1922 - 29 May 1993) was a member of the Transvaal Indian Congress and later the African National Congress. She is well known for the role she played in the national uprising of women on 9 August 1956. Moosa was also a shop steward for the Cape Town Food and Canning Workers Union.

Rahima Moosa was one of identical sisters born in the Strand, Cape Town in 1922. She was brought up in a liberated Islamic environment and she attended Trafalgar High School in District Six. She dropped out of school with little formal education. Annoyed by the policies of the Apartheid government she and her twin sister Fatima campaigned for change. Rahima was a shop steward and in 1951 she married her comrade activist Dr. Hassen “Ike” Mohamed Moosa who had already stood trial for treason. They moved to Johannesburg and had four children. Both of them were very active in the South African Indian Congress and later the African National Congress. Together they played a role organising the 1955 Congress of the People and the Freedom Charter. Rahima, Sophia Williams-De Bruyn, Helen Joseph and Lillian Ngoyi led 20,000 women's march on 9 August 1956 to demonstrate against the further strengthening of Pass Laws. This day is now celebrated annually as National Women's Day.


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