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    Odyssey to Freedom

    By George Bizos

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    "In October 1941 a young boy and his father disembarked at Durban
    harbour from a large liner commissioned into emergency service by
    the Allies. They were Greek refugees from their German-occupied
    motherland. They spoke no English. They had little money and no
    prospects. They were heroes, but no one knew that.
    Some months earlier, father and son, together with two other
    Greek men and seven New Zealand soldiers, had set off in an open
    boat in an attempt to escape the German invaders. For two days and
    nights, sailing by instinct and the stars, battered by fierce winds,
    their food stocks running low, their water bottles almost empty, they
    ploughed across the Mediterranean towards Crete, little knowing
    that the island was soon to capitulate to the Germans.
    Fortunately the escapees sailed into an Allied fleet while it was still
    light and were rescued. Had they encountered the fleet in darkness
    their fate might have been dire, as, sometimes, in the horrors of war
    no prisoners were taken – a reality the young boy discovered not
    many nights later.
    The boy who stood on the Durban docks, appalled at the sight
    of Zulu men doing the work of animals by pulling rickshaws, would
    become one of the leading human-rights lawyers in the country that
    his father had chosen because the pavements were allegedly paved
    with gold. The boy was George Bizos.
    Today George Bizos is a legendary name, renowned throughout the
    legal profession and beyond. More than that, he is a figure recognised
    in townships across South Africa. For as an advocate, Bizos is
    associated with the Treason Trial of the late 1950s; the subsequent
    Rivonia Trial where his colleague, client and friend Nelson Mandela
    was sentenced to life imprisonment; the trial of Bram Fischer; that of
    the Namibian Toivo ja Toivo; a host of major human-rights trials through
    the 1970s and 1980s right up to the amnesty hearings of the Truth and
    Reconciliation Commission; and, in 2004, with the treason trial of the
    Zimbabwean opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, in that country. A consummate lawyer, a self-styled street fighter with a quiet tone of
    voice and a beguiling smile who, in cross examination, would slice
    through the evidence of security police and apartheid apologists
    alike, Bizos haunted the courtrooms of the apartheid regime. For
    four decades he exposed State lies and hypocrisy, State brutality
    and murder. In response the State badgered and threatened him,
    bugged his phone, obstructed his hearings. But the advocate was
    not to be intimidated.
    In this compelling and long-awaited autobiography, George Bizos
    reveals the drama, the heartache and the moments of triumph, the
    fears and the frustrations of his long career as an advocate. He writes,
    moreover, about himself and his family, and the domestic moments
    that made bearable the brutal years. He revels in his return to his
    beloved Greece, his joy at the Athens Olympic Games and his love of
    modern Greek poetry.
    Above all, his is a warm and compassionate account, related by
    a raconteur of note. It is history told from the inside."
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