4.2.12 WC: 191694 “On the face of it the issue certainly seems to me like blacklisting. I’m sure they make good arguments for it on the basis that a legitimate tactic of the United Nations is boycotting, but still I’m sure that if I examined it as closely as you have, I would find there would be no excuse for it. Thanks for keeping me informed. Best, Woody.” During the Apartheid regime, I was invited to speak at the Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg. Many in that university had been on the forefront of opposing Apartheid and I was anxious to lend support to these efforts by delivering a strong human rights message. When I appeared at the South African consulate in Boston to receive my Visa, the Counsel General was well prepared: he had on his desk the Yale Law Journal article I had edited. He told me that before he could consider my application, he wanted to see a copy of my proposed speech. I declined his request, citing freedom of expression. I did not receive the Visa and had to postpone my first visit to South Africa until after the end of apartheid. I had hoped not only to speak against apartheid during my aborted visit to South Africa, but also to try to get to Robin’s Island to meet with the imprisoned Nelson Mandela. I was working with Professor Irwin Cotler, with whom I had taught human rights at Harvard Law School, on a complicated legal plan to free Mandela. Our plan began following the arrest of an East German professor in Boston on charges of spying for his country. I received a call from an East German lawyer asking if I could represent him or recommend a good lawyer who could. The East German lawyer—who was a well known and trusted “spy-swapper’—told me that his client was innocent, but that the East German might be willing to arrange a “spy swap” for my client Anatoly Sharanksy. I told him that my client wasn’t a spy so a “spy swap” was off the table. He responded “neither is my client.” He then proposed a possible “prisoner exchange, includin