After completing a midwifery course at King Edward Hospital, Victoria Mxenge worked as a community nurse at
Umlazi Clinic. She then studied law through the
University of South Africa. In 1981, some five years after her husband had set up a legal practice she acquired legal qualifications, joined the practice and was subsequently admitted as an attorney. On 19 November 1981, her husband was brutally assassinated by
Vlakplaas agents led by
Dirk Coetzee in
Umlazi township, south of
Durban. He had multiple stab wounds and his body was found near the soccer field in Umlazi and it fell on her to identify his mutilated body at a government mortuary the morning after his murder. It was claimed by police general Dirk Coetzee that her husband was murdered by the
African National Congress (ANC), which she vigorously refuted. The ANC issued a public statement from Lusaka decrying his murder and paying tribute to his contribution in the struggle. In 1996, Dirk Coetzee confessed that he led a group that killed Mxenge. After her husband's murder, Mxenge kept their law practice going. In 1983, she successfully defended students against the confiscation of their results by the Department of Education". She also intervened in cases in which the youth were ill-treated while imprisoned. Mxenge represented families of victims of the Matolo raid and Lesotho raid. Mxenge started a bursary fund in memory of her husband. She became a member of the Release
Nelson Mandela Committee (RMC), sat on the executive of the National Organisation of Women (NOW) and the Natal Treasurer of the UDF. Mxenge was part of the defence team for the
United Democratic Front and
Natal Indian Congress during the
Pietermaritzburg Treason Trial at the
Pietermaritzburg Supreme Court. In July 1985, she spoke at the funeral of the
Cradock Four,
Matthew Goniwe,
Fort Calata,
Sparrow Mkhonto and
Sicelo Mhlauli. The funeral was attended by over 50,000 mourners. During her speech Mxenge condemned the apartheid government and referred to the murder of the Cradock Four as a "dastardly act of cowardices." ==Murder==