It is perhaps understandable that Emily Hobhouse has not to date received the recognition she deserves in her own country, given that she found herself on the wrong side of the kinds of stories that national histories like to tell - opposing British internment camps during the war against the Boers in southern Africa and as a pacifist during the First World War - but it high time, in 2018, that the contribution of this remarkable woman was rediscovered.
Author Elsabé Brits travelled in Emily Hobhouses footsteps, retracing her inspirational, often astonishing story. In the home of the granddaughter of Emilys younger brother, Jennifer Hobhouse Balme, in Canada, Brits found not just Emilys draft autobiography, but also her diaries, of which she had been unaware. With these revealing new sources, Brits brings to life a colourful story of war, heroism and passion, spanning three continents.
Brits tells the story of an extraordinary Englishwoman and her lifelong fight for justice, both during the Anglo-Boer South African War and during the First World War. Defying the constraints of her gender and class, Emily Hobhouse travelled across continents and spoke out against oppression. A passionate pacifist and a feminist, she opposed both the 1899-1902 Anglo-Boer War and the First World War, which led to accusations of treason. Despite saving thousands of lives in two wars, she died alone - spurned by her country, her friends and even some of her relatives.
There were forty-five internment camps in South Africa, designed to keep Boer women and children off the land and unable to feed or otherwise support Boer combatants. During the eighteen months during which the camps were in operation, 26,370 of those interned died, 24,000 of them children under sixteen and infants, who died at the rate of about 50 a day.
Hobhouse was later an avid opponent of the First World War, protesting vigorously against it. She organised the writing, signing and publishing in January 1915 of the Open Christmas Letter addressed To the Women of Germany and Austria. Through her offices, thousands of women and children were fed daily for more than a year in central Europe after this war.
Hobhouses ashes are ensconced in a niche in the National Womens Monument at Bloemfontein in South Africa, but she has never received the recognition she deserves, and so longed for, in her own country.