Simon Nkoli
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Simon Tseko Nkoli was an anti-apartheid, gay rights and AIDS activist in South Africa. He died of AIDS in 1998. Nkoli was born in Soweto in a seSotho-speaking family. He grew up on a farm in the Free State and his family later moved to Sebokeng. Nkoli became a youth activist against apartheid, with the Congress of South African Students and with the United Democratic Front.
In 1983 he joined the mainly white Gay Association of South Africa, then he formed the Saturday Group, the first black gay group in Africa.
Nkoli spoke at rallies in support of rent-boycotts in the Vaal townships and in 1984 he was arrested and faced the death penalty for treason with twenty-one other political leaders in the Delmas trial. By coming out while a prisoner, he helped change the attitude of the African National Congress to gay rights. He was acquitted and released from prison in 1988.
He founded the Gay and Lesbian Organisation of the Witwatersrand in 1988. He traveled widely and was given several human rights awards in Europe and North America. He was a member of International Lesbian and Gay Association board, representing the African region.
He was one of the first gay activists to meet with President Nelson Mandela in 1994. He helped in the campaign for the inclusion of protection from discrimination in the Bill of Rights in the 1994 South African constitution, and for the May 1998 repeal of the sodomy law.
After becoming one of the first publicly HIV-positive African gay men, he initiated the Positive African Men group based in central Johannesburg. He had been infected with HIV for around 12 years, and had been seriously ill, on and off, for the last four.
There is a Simon Nkoli Street in Amsterdam and a Simon Nkoli Day in San Francisco. He opened the first Gay Games in New York and was made a freeman of that city by mayor David Dinkins. In 1996 Nkoli was given the Stonewall Award in the Royal Albert Hall in London.
Simon and I - Film by Beverley Palesa Ditsie and Nicky Newman, 52 minutes, South Africa (Steps for the Future Films)
http://groups.msn.com/ReggieWilliamsExhibit/friends.msnw Sunday Times, South Africa - Sunday, December 6, 1998
Excerpts from: Aldrich R. & Wotherspoon G., Who's Who in Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History, from WWII to Present Day, Routledge, London, 2001
[edit] See also
HIV/AIDS in South Africa
Joel Gustave Nana Ngongang
Categories: Cleanup from September 2006 | All pages needing cleanup | Orphaned articles from September 2006 | All orphaned articles | 1998 deaths | Year of birth missing | AIDS-related deaths | AIDS activists | South African activists | LGBT people from South Africa | People of South African descent | Youth activists | South African people stubs