After a year in the United States, where he studied on a scholarship at
Princeton University, Saloojee became involved in activism against the
Group Areas Act as a founding member and chairman of the Action Committee to Stop Evictions (ACTSTOP), which opposed evictions of
Indian families (including his own) from rentals in downtown Johannesburg. During this period, in the early 1980s, Saloojee became increasingly involved in
anti-apartheid politics, partly due to the influence of his teenaged sons. He was involved in boycotts of the
Indian Council and later of the
Tricameral Parliament, both formed to provide nominal political representation to Indians in the apartheid government. He was a founding member of the
United Democratic Front (UDF) in 1983 and became its national treasurer. In this capacity, he was arrested in February 1985, and – alongside
Albertina Sisulu,
Archie Gumede,
Frank Chikane, and other UDF leaders – was charged with
treason in the
Pietermaritzburg Treason Trial. The charges against him were dropped in December 1985. In August 1988, at the Transvaal Indian Congress's first conference since its revival in 1983, Saloojee was elected to succeed
Essop Jassat as president of the congress. == Post-apartheid career ==