Bizos outside the courtroom: a gardener who met eminent people in their muddy slippers and pajamas.



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  • George Bizos’ son Damon said his father liked gardening.
  • Bizos came to South Africa in 1941 as a teenage war refugee from Greece.
  • He continued working until he was 91 years old.

He was one of the most celebrated lawyers in the world, a soft-spoken but courageous defender who defended Nelson Mandela.

But to his son, George Bizos, who passed away this week at the age of 92, he was also a passionate vegetable grower, gardening in his pajamas.

When he wasn’t in court or writing legal documents until late at night, Bizos enjoyed growing vegetables at his home in the Johannesburg suburb of Parktown.

READ | Selfless, generous, larger than life: SA mourns legal titan George Bizos

“Often very prominent people would come to visit him and he would sit on the patio and carry them around the garden in his slippers, which were covered in mud, and his pajamas,” his son, Damon Bizos, said in an interview.

“We always try to tell him, ‘Dad, please, you know, the ambassador from this or that country will come to see you, or the vice president or the president will come, can’t you just put some clothes on? On?’ And he would say ‘Listen, this is who I am,’ and he left. ”

George the gardener

“I don’t know how many people know what a tremendous gardener George was,” retired Constitutional Court judge Johann Kriegler told News24.

“He supplied vegetables to everyone at his little stand in Parktown North.”

Bizos had a magnificent garden where he used to go to spiritual therapy during times of litigation, Kriegler said.

“George would go to his garden to think about his particular legal or political problem of the day.”

Kriegler said he would get some of the vegetables too.

“I was very grateful for it. You used to feel guilty because you couldn’t reciprocate but I always knew you had a spare because he was such a good and magnificent gardener.”

– Kyle Cowan

Bizos came to South Africa as a 13-year-old war refugee from Greece and trained as a lawyer, dedicating himself to upholding democratic values ​​and human rights.

He represented Mandela during the 1964 Rivonia trial, in which Mandela and seven others were sentenced to life imprisonment on charges of trying to overthrow the apartheid government.

Many expected the death penalty.

Instead, Mandela and the others became living emblems and rallying points in the fight against white minority rule.

Damon, one of Bizos’ three sons, said that his father’s eccentricities were the outer face of a strong individual.

“He was his own man,” said Damon, 62, a professor of surgery at the University of the Witwatersrand. “He did what he thought was right.”

READ ALSO | George Bizos ‘was the most decent human being’ – Chris Hani’s widow

Bizos continued working until he was 90, and one of his last major cases secured government payments in 2014 for families of 34 miners shot to death two years earlier.

“He managed to do a full day of work until he was 91,” Damon said. “We always try to ask him to slow down.”

Bizos’ funeral, yet another in a string of anti-apartheid heroes, is expected next week.

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