Education
During his time in prison, Maharaj completed a B.Admin, an Master of Business Administration and the second year of a B.Sc degree before his release on 8 December 1976.
During his time in prison, Maharaj completed a B.Admin, an Master of Business Administration and the second year of a B.Sc degree before his release on 8 December 1976.
He is the former official spokesperson of the President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma. In July 1964, Maharaj was arrested in Johannesburg, charged and convicted with four others on charges of sabotage in the little Rivonia trial, and was imprisoned on Robben Island with Mandela. In prison he secretly transcribed Mandela"s memoir Long Walk to Freedom and smuggled it out of the prison in 1976.
After being released from the Robben Island prison in 1976, Maharaj was deployed by the African National Congress to Zambia in 1977.
He was elected to the National Executive Committee of the African National Congress in 1985. From 1988 to 1990 Maharaj worked underground in South Africa as part of the African National Congress"s Operation Vula, which was a project to infiltrate the African National Congress"s top leaders back into South Africa.
Maharaj reported to the then African National Congress intelligence chief Jacob Zuma. He was post-1994 South Africa"s first Minister of Transport, a post he took on 11 May 1994 and kept until the general election of 1999.
After the national elections of 1999, Mac Maharaj stepped down from politics and joined FirstRand Bank and was its highest paid non-executive director
In August 2003 Maharaj resigned from FirstRand Bank following the media furor around the allegations of corruption. In March 2007 the South African newspaper, City Press, published allegations that Maharaj’s wife Zarina opened a Swiss bank account in 1996, and two days after opening it, received over $100,000 into the account from Schabir Shaik. Six months later, in March 1997, the same Swiss account received a further $100,000 from Schabir Shaik.
On 6 July 2011 he was appointed by President Jacob Zuma as his Spokesperson with immediate effect.
In November 2011 the South African newspaper The Mail and Guardian attempted to publish further allegations about both Mac and Zarina Maharaj, in relation to their interviews by prosecutors in 2003, but did not do so after Mac Maharaj laid criminal charges against the newspaper for allegedly infringing the laws protecting the secrecy of the 2003 prosecutor interviews. In 2005, he joined the faculty of Bennington College in Vermont, United States of America.
"You don"t have to carry a gun to be a freedom fighter."
"Revenge should not be our motivation.".
Quotations:
"You don"t have to carry a gun to be a freedom fighter."
"Revenge should not be our motivation.".
Maharaj was a political activist and member of the South African Communist Party, who worked in a clandestine manner on anti-apartheid activities with Nelson Mandela. During this time Maharaj worked with Schabir Shaik"s two brothers, Yunis Shaik and Moe Shaik, also members of the African National Congress.