Raymond Louw

Raymond Louw (13 October 1926[1] – 5 June 2019) was a South African journalist, editor, and media commentator in South Africa. He was an editor of the influential Rand Daily Mail and received numerous awards and accolades for his services to journalism and media freedom in South Africa.[2][3] In 2011, he was named a World Press Freedom Hero by the Vienna-based International Press Institute. The award cited his "commitment to press freedom and his outspoken defence of journalists’ rights".[4]

Raymond Louw
Born
Raymond Louw

(1926-10-13)13 October 1926
Cape Town, South Africa
Died5 June 2019(2019-06-05) (aged 92)
South Africa
NationalitySouth African
OccupationJournalist and editor
EmployerRand Daily Mail
Known foreditorship Rand Daily Mail during the 1960s and 80s
Spouse(s)Jean
ChildrenFiona, Derek, Alistair

Early life

Born in Cape Town, Union of South Africa, on 13 October 1926, Louw attended Parktown Boys' High School in Johannesburg. After completing his matric, he sat a railway exam and was accepted for an apprenticeship as a mechanical engineer but instead took a job as a copy holder at the Rand Daily Mail.[5]:17 He would apply several time to be a reporter but he claimed was turned down due to his Afrikaner sounding surname even though he was English, so it took two years to become a junior reporter in 1946.[5]:17[6]

Career

To improve his journalism experience, he left with his wife for six years of work experience in England.[5]:17 There he worked as a reporter on the Worthing Gazette and Barrow Evening News.[5]:17 After he returned to South Africa, he became the night news editor of the Rand Daily Mail and in 1959, became the editor of the Sunday Times.[6] He replaced Laurence Gandar as editor of the Rand Daily Mail in 1965 and was seen an apolitical candidate than the former editor, less likely to offend the government.[6][5]:17

In 1974 the board of the Mail attempted to remove him by asking him to chair a committee to implement an electronic editing project but refused.[5]:17 By 1975 he assisted in preventing the South African Associated Newspapers (SAAN) being purchased by government backed buyers which is successful, changed the editorial content of the group.[5]:17 In October 1976 he was fired as editor of the Mail and the board reluctantly appointed as the General Manager of SAAN in 1977.[5]:17 Though given no work for five months, he held the position until 1982 when his position ended during company wide restructuring.[5]:17

Later life

After his retrenchment in 1982, he continued to maintain an interest in journalism.[5]:17 In 1983, he and his wife started a weekly newsletter, the Southern African Report, a publication the maintained until 2010 when they sold it.[5]:17 On the demise of the Rand Daily Mail in 1985, he attempted to rescue it by seeking new backers and attempting to get the owners to reverse their decision.[7] In 1989, he met the ANC in Lusaka with other journalists and businessmen as part of the Five Freedoms Forum.[8] He headed the Media Defence Trust, an organisation created to assist journalist censored or imprisoned.[5]:17 In 1996, he campaigned for the release of jailed journalists around the world and helped in the release of Pius Njawé and Ali Lmrabet.[6] He was vice president of the South African branch of PEN International.[6] Chair of the New Era Schools Trust, it helped establish non-racial schools.[6] And he help found the University of Witwatersrand's Media Business Training Foundation which assisted to improved the training of Black business journalists.[6]

Marriage

He met his wife Jean, a sister of a colleague at the Rand Daily Mail and they married in 1949.[5]:17

Honours

He received an honorary doctorate of literature from Rhodes University in 2012 and the same honour from the University of Witwatersrand in 2015.[9] Awards included the Pringle Medal for services to journalism from the SA Society of Journalists.[9] In 2005, received the Media Freedom Award from Media Institute of Southern Africa.[9] In 2007, he received the Mondi-Shanduka Newspaper Lifetime Achiever Award.[9] Louw was awarded the International Press Institute award for Press Freedom Campaigning in 2011, jointly with Daniel Pearl.[5]:17

Death

He died on 5 June 2019 at the age of 92 of a heart attack after recovering from an operation for a kidney infection.[10] His wife Jean died the day before, following an operation after breaking her hip in a fall a week earlier.[7] He is survived by daughter Fiona Ramsay and Derek Louw.[7]

gollark: Oh yes, imagine how horrible it would be if people could use your projects.
gollark: 5 seems bizarre.
gollark: Sometimes many at once!
gollark: My closed-source things are mostly closed-source because:- they are trivial and I do not care enough to move them to random-stuff- they contain osmarks.net implementation details or personal data I have not bothered to disentangle- the code is too ææææææææ to release
gollark: They also did open *some* things.

References

  1. "Raymond Louw - Lifetime Achiever", Bizcommunity Biography, 26 April 2007. Accessed 18 June 2011.
  2. "Raymond Louw", Who's Who, Southern Africa. Accessed 18 June 2011.
  3. "Daniel Pearl, Raymond Louw Named IPI World Press Freedom Heroes". International Press Institute. 25 August 2011. Archived from the original on 19 February 2012. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  4. Barron, Chris (9 June 2019). "Raymond Louw: SA's greatest newspaper editor and fighter for a free press 1926-2019". Sunday Times (South Africa).
  5. Evans, Gavin (6 June 2019). "Raymond Louw, the South African editor who steered his newspaper against apartheid". The Independent. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  6. Matisonn, John (6 June 2019). "OBITUARY: Raymond Louw: A Journalist's Editor". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  7. "Newspaper great Raymond Louw dies, aged 92". TimesLIVE. 5 June 2019. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  8. "'Mr Press Freedom' Raymond Louw mourned". News24. 5 June 2019. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  9. Lindeque, Mia. "SA veteran journalist Raymond Louw dies one day after wife". ewn.co.za. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
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