Ellen 'Maposholi Molapo

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Ellen 'Maposholi Molapo
Member of the Senate
In office
1965–

Ellen 'Maposholi Molapo was a Mosotho politician. The first woman to play a prominent role in politics in Lesotho, she became its first female member of Parliament when she was appointed to the Senate in 1965.

Biography[edit]

During the 1950s Molapo lived in the Newclare area of Johannesburg, where she was a member of the Garment Workers Union and became an activist for the African National Congress.[1][2] Having attended first conference of the Basutoland Congress Party (BCP),[3] she began campaigning for the party amongst other Basutoland expatriates working in Transvaal, becoming the first woman amongst the party leadership.[2][4] She also joined the Pan Africanist Congress and was elected treasurer.[5]

In 1960 she left the BCP after a falling out with party leader Ntsu Mokhehle.[3] She and several other PAC leaders were convicted by South African courts in 1961 for running an illegal organisation, with Molapo receiving a twelve-month sentence.[6] The following year she was deported by the South African authorities.[7] She subsequently became a member of the Marematlou Freedom Party headed by her brother Seth Matotoko, who had lived with her while she was in South Africa.[8] She frequently upstaged Matotoko at campaign rallies with her rhetoric and singing,[8] and was regarded as one of the party's most effective campaigners.[4] In April 1965 she was appointed to the Senate, becoming the country's first female member of parliament.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gail M. Gerhart (1977) From Protest to Challenge a Documentary History of African Politics in South Africa 1882-1964: Challenge and Violence 1953-1964, p372
  2. ^ a b Martin S. Shanguhyia & Toyin Falola (2018) The Palgrave Handbook of African Colonial and Postcolonial History, p177
  3. ^ a b Marc Epprecht (1992) Women, Class and Politics in Colonial Lesotho, 1930-1965, pp345–346
  4. ^ a b Marc Epprecht (1995) "Women's 'conservatism' and the politics of gender in late colonial Lesotho", Journal of African History, issue 36, pp29–56
  5. ^ Suid-Afrikaanse Hofverslae, volume 4, p321
  6. ^ 2 More PAC Convictions New Age, 9 March 1951
  7. ^ Welcome For Mrs. Molapo New Age, 1 March 1962
  8. ^ a b Scott Rosenberg & Richard F. Weisfelder (2013) Historical Dictionary of Lesotho, pp295–296
  9. ^ Mart Martin (2000) The Almanac of Women and Minorities in World Politics, p229