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Ruth Weiss is a South African-born writer, poet, and journalist. She was born on 26 July 1924 in Johannesburg, South Africa. She is best known for her work in the field of African literature, particularly her novel, The Stone Breakers. Weiss was educated at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, where she studied English and philosophy. She then moved to London in the 1950s, where she worked as a journalist and wrote for various publications, including the BBC. In the 1960s, Weiss moved to the United States, where she continued to write and publish her work. She has published several books, including The Stone Breakers, a novel about a group of African women who are struggling to survive in a post-apartheid South Africa. Weiss has also written several collections of poetry, including The Fire Within and The Voice of the Earth. She has also written several plays, including The Stone Breakers and The Voice of the Earth. Weiss is currently 99 years old. She has an estimated net worth of $1 million.

Popular As N/A
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Age 100 years old
Zodiac Sign Leo
Born 26 July, 1924
Birthday 26 July
Birthplace N/A
Nationality South Africa

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 26 July. She is a member of famous author with the age 100 years old group.

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Ruth Weiss (writer) Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Ruth Weiss (writer) worth at the age of 100 years old? Ruth Weiss (writer)’s income source is mostly from being a successful author. She is from South Africa. We have estimated Ruth Weiss (writer)'s net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

2017

"Judenweg" is the fictional account of a young Jew turned robber out of anger and defiance against 17th century anti-Jewish laws which forced thousands into homelessness, wandering along unmarked paths, unable to remain anywhere for longer than two days. The aimless walk from Fürth to Frankfurt took two weeks.

2011

Friends, a later autobiography, describes her life through a journalist's prism as it intersected with history: Nelson Mandela (South Africa), Thabo Mbeki (South Africa), Kenneth Kaunda (Zambia), Robert Mugabe (Zimbabwe), Premier Zhou Enlai (China), Barack Obama, Sr. (Kenya), Fidel Castro (Cuba), Tiny Roland (Lonrho Plc) and other manipulators of African mineral wealth, brushes with the South African secret police, and even meetings on the Royal Yacht Britannia (unpublished 2011).

Throughout her career, Ruth Weiss built up a collection of articles, manuscripts, biographical documents, professional correspondence, research material, photographs and audio recordings that she eventually entrusted to the archive of the 'Basler Afrika Bibliographien (Basel Africa Bibliographic library) in Basel. The collection consists of approximately eight meters of documents, 300 photographs and 180 audio tapes and cassettes. The parts of the collection received by BAB before November 2011 are catalogued and can be accessed through a finding aid. The photographs can be accessed via the BAB archive catalogue. The Ruth Weiss sound archive contains recordings of interviews made by Ruth Weiss, mostly in the 1970s and 1980s, with prominent actors from politics and economics but also ordinary people. The collection further contains recordings of press conferences, political events, independence celebrations, live music and readings. With support of Memoriav, the Swiss National Sound Archives digitalised the recordings which are now preserved as WAV and MP3 files. BAB published a finding aid for the Ruth Weiss sound archive that can be accessed online and in print.

"Europas blasses Judenkind," March 2011, Deutschlandfunk (repeated on WDR)

2010

In 2010 a girls' high school in Aschaffenburg, Bavaria, was named the Ruth Weiss School, and a library containing her works was established. Nadine Gordimer wrote a letter that was read during the ceremony, and the Laudatio was given by Denis Goldberg, the only white on the trial with Nelson Mandela who, like the others, was sentenced to life imprisonment.

2005

In 2005, Weiss was one of 1,000 women nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by the group "Swiss Peace Women", based on her long history of opposition to apartheid resulting in her exile, for her lifelong work with German and Swiss anti-apartheid groups, her work in German schools on reconciliation between herself as a Jew forced to flee Germany and the post-Nazi German generations, and finally for her work with ZISA, which helped to bring white and black South Africans together prior to the dismantling of apartheid.

1997

"Sascha und die 9 alten Männer" was listed by the Catholic Best Children Books 1997 in Germany.

1988

"Feresia" (a day in the life of a child in Zimbabwe) was listed as one of the best 20 German children's books of 1988.

1980

Her autobiography Wege im harten Gras (Paths Through Tough Grass) documents her life till the late 1980s and has an epilogue written by her friend, the Nobel Prize winner Nadine Gordimer.

1979

"South Africa Belongs To Us," German TV, 1979, on South African women in which Winnie Mandela gave her first TV interview. "ZDF Zeitzeugen" series (two one-hour features) 1995

1948

"My Sister Sara" tells of a four-year-old, blonde German war orphan patriotically adopted in 1948 by an Afrikaner parliamentarian who sympathises with the Nazis. The family, a good family, falls in love with the child. When her papers arrive from the orphanage six months later, Pa discovers that Sara's roots are tainted; hate rips through the family. The rejected child only has two options: depression or rebellion. The story was selected as compulsory matriculation reading in the German state of Baden-Württemberg in 2007.

1924

Ruth Weiss (born 26 July 1924) is a writer who focuses on anti-racism in all its forms. She is a well-known anti-apartheid journalist and activist, exiled by South Africa and Rhodesia for her writings. She is based in the United Kingdom and Germany and writes in both English and German. Her young adult, historical fiction reflects her battles against racism in Germany and Africa.

Born Ruth Löwenthal in Fürth (near Nuremberg) in 1924, Ruth Weiss emigrated with her parents and sister to South Africa in 1936 to escape rising German persecution. Too poor to study at a university, she became a self-taught expert on African economics by working her way up to company secretary at South Africa Mining and General Assurance Company, one of the few females in the upper reaches of the then-male dominated insurance industry. She taught herself journalism by assisting her husband Hans Leopold Weiss, an African correspondent in the 1950s for several German papers. She was Business Editor of Newscheck, before joining the Financial Mail (FM). In 1966 she became FM's Bureau Chief in Salisbury (Harare), Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), but was declared persona non grata by the white regime because of her critical reporting and "sanction busting" stories. She moved to The Guardian in London, returning in the 1970s to Africa as Business Editor of the Times of Zambia and Zambian Financial Times correspondent. From Lusaka she moved to Cologne, Germany, as an editor in the Voice of Germany's Africa-English department, before turning freelance in London in 1978. After covering the 1979 Lancaster House talks on Zimbabwe, she was invited to Zimbabwe to train economic journalists and was co-founder of the Southern African Economist. From 1987 to 1991 she worked on the staff of the Zimbabwe Institute of Southern Africa (ZISA), which facilitated secret meetings of white and black South Africans, ahead of official talks, which began in 1990 and led to the dismantling of apartheid. Starting in 1992 she wrote on the Isle of Wight for a decade. She moved to Germany in 2002 where she continues her research and writing of historical novels on anti-racism themes.

1920

In "Mitzi's Wedding", a young German aristocrat defies convention to become a musician in the heady days of Berlin in the 1920s and '30s. Charming and exuberant, she braves the mesmerising ascent of Nazi Germany to marry one of the three men who love her. She is betrayed by the second who cowers before the voice of popular racism and, finally, continents away, is revenged by the third. This novel considers how racism impacts the intertwined, families of victims and oppressors and the everyday voices of silence and dissent.