Smith grew up on the family farm in Selukwe (now
Shurugwi), a small mining and farming town with a population in the 1950s of around 8,500 (8,000
Black and 500
White). His father Ian Smith had married Janet Watt in late-1948, after returning from war service with a facial disfigurement resulting from crashing his
Hurricane whilst taking off from an airfield in Egypt. Watt was a South African school teacher who had previously been married to Piet Duvenage, a South African who had died as the result of a sporting accident while playing
rugby. At the time Watt met Smith, she was struggling to support herself and two young children on a modest teacher's salary. Ian Smith brought up Watt's two children, Robert and Jean, from her earlier marriage, as his own, with his son Alec. In April 1964, one month before his 15th birthday, Smith's father became
Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia. The younger Smith later suggested that this had caused his family life to suffer. He attended
Chaplin High School, and in 1970, Smith began studying law at
Rhodes University in
South Africa. On his own for the first time, he became increasingly alienated from his background and neglected his studies, falling into drug and alcohol abuse. He was expelled from the university at the end of his first year in 1971. Whilst returning from a subsequent holiday in
Portuguese-ruled
Mozambique, Smith was found to be in possession of 200 grams (7 oz) of
cannabis at the Tete/Nyamapanda border post between Mozambique and Rhodesia and taken to Salisbury Central Police Station. He was convicted of drug trafficking, fined and given a suspended prison sentence. Returning to
Rhodesia, Smith held a number of odd jobs. He also served without distinction as a conscript in the
Rhodesian Security Forces. In 1972, Smith declared himself a
born-again Christian, stating that God had freed him from his past debauchery and helped him see the injustice of racial discrimination. He aligned himself with the
Moral Rearmament group, held public meetings promoting majority rule, and became a close friend of black nationalist leader Rev Arthur Kanodereka. Tragically Kanodereka was assassinated at the end of 1978. ==Life abroad==