Below:
Speech
delivered by SACP General Secretary, Cde Blade Nzimande, on the
27th Anniversary
of the death of Moses Mabhida
Rally
to
celebrate the legacy of Moses Mabhida
- Date:
10
March 2013 (Sunday)
-
Venue:
Slahla Stadium, Richmond, near Pietermaritzburg, KZN
-
Address:
SACP National Chairperson Comrade Senzeni Zokwana
For more information please contact:
SACP Moses Mabhida Provincial Secretary Themba Mthembu at
083 303 6988
or
SACP National Spokesperson at 082 226 1802
Moses
Mabhida, Victorious Combatant
Remembering and honouring Moses
Mabhida on the 27th
Anniversary of his death, 8 March 2013
Speech of SACP General
Secretary, Cde Blade
Nzimande
At the Memorial Lecture in
honour of Moses Mabhida held at
University of KwaZulu-Natal in the Pietermaritzburg campus
Jack Simons, the late stalwart of the SACP, writing in the
African Communist, Fourth Quarter, in 1986, and in paying
tribute to the builders
of the SACP, amongst whom being Moses Mabhida who had passed
away in the same
year, said:
“Communists by and
large consider that
social forces are the mainspring of change and
development. The forces and
relations of production, though an essential part of
living, occur
independently of individual wills. Social forces in
Marxist-Leninist theory
shape the struggle between competing classes.
“Men
make their own history, said Marx. They
do so in accordance with the prevailing relations and
forces of production. If
necessity is the mother of invention, the necessity arises
from the material
conditions of life.
“Great
men in history recognize the
necessity and respond through appropriate action… In the
world of politics,
which embraces the struggle for state power and its
control, the historical
mission of communists is to accomplish the transition from
the capitalist mode
of production to socialism.
“South
African communists have an additional
task. This is to reconcile the class struggle with the
struggle for freedom
from white domination, race discrimination and national
oppression – in short,
to combine radical socialism with national liberation”.
In the above passages Cde Jack Simons captures a number of
important things. Firstly to underline that people wage
struggles within the context
of definite objective realities. But nevertheless leaders also
have an
important role to play, partly to lead in the interpretation of
these realities
in order to devise appropriate means of struggle to overthrow
all forms of
oppression and exploitation. It is in fact these objective (and
historical)
circumstances that tend to produce leaders to transform those
very same
conditions.
In addition, Simons defines the tasks of South African
communists in particular and the role they have to play in the
South African revolution.
Note that Simons is not lamenting – he is clearly defining the
role of
communists and the necessity to take responsibility in the
struggle against
national oppression and for socialism!
Indeed these have been the defining feature of the role of
the South African Communist Party, its leaders and members, in
the South
African struggle –taking responsibility for the national
democratic revolution!
That is precisely what our late General Secretary that we
remember today, Cde
Moses Mbheki Mncane Mabhida, actually did – dedicated his entire
life to the
struggle for national liberation and socialism!
Moses Mabhida was a living embodiment of our Alliance, which
in itself has been an expression of the deep interconnectedness
between the struggle
for national liberation and socialism. At the time of his death,
Moses Mabhida
was General Secretary of the South African Communist Party, a
member of the
national executives of both the African National Congress (ANC)
and the South
African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU). He was a communist, a
revolutionary
trade unionist and a true Congressman! How did all this come
about and what lessons
should we be learning out of his life and struggles today?
A humble man from
humble origins in a Party of activism
Cde Moses Mabhida, often referred to as ‘Stimela’ by Harry
Gwala, was born on 14 October 1923 at Thornville here in
Pietermaritzburg. He grew
up with a deep resentment of the theft of land of his family and
the African
people in general by white colonists. He started school at a
late age in 1932, his
schooling was often interrupted by his having to work as a herd
boy.
One of his teachers at school at Slangspruit was the late
Cde Harry Gwala who influenced him to join both the ANC and the
progressive trade
union movement. Cde Mabhida joined the Communist Party in 1942.
It is important
to understand the period during which Mabhida joined the CPSA
(as the Party was
then known) in order to understand his political outlook.
The 1940s can be regarded as the ‘golden decade’ and, in
many ways, the coming of age of the Communist Party in South
Africa as an indispensable
force in the South African revolution. The 1940s marked the
consolidation and
taking to higher levels the many struggles that the CPSA had
been engaged in
since its founding in 1921.
The all-important decision taken in 1928 by the Communist
Party through the Native Republic Thesis to work with the ANC,
marking the foundations
of our Alliance, was followed by a very difficult decade of
factionalism and
debilitating internal battles within the Party in the 1930s.
Part of these
tensions were about the correctness of choosing to work with the
ANC as a
nationalist movement, with some of the Party members doubting
the wisdom of
this decision. Some saw this as a postponement of the struggle
for socialism.
It was after the ascendancy of Moses Kotane as General
Secretary of the then Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA),
that our Party embarked
upon and led many of the mass struggles in the 1940s, thus
laying a very
important foundation for the ANC-led mass struggles of the
1950s.
During the 1940s, communists like Dora Tamana were leading
important struggle in the squatter settlements, including
pioneering work in building
co-operatives. Many African communists also joined the ANC in
the 1940s,
including Moses Mabhida and Harry Gwala. The Communist Party
further took its
early work of building the non-racial trade union movement to
new heights,
including the founding of the Council of Non-European Trade
Unions, an early
attempt at building a progressive federation of trade unions.
The high point of
Party work in the trade union movement was the great 1946
Mineworkers Strike,
led by communists such as JB Marks, who was also the Chairman of
our Party.
Communists in the 1940s also expanded their internationalist
work, especially around the period of the Nazi attack on the
Soviet Union. The
Party led a number of struggles in solidarity with the Soviet
Union and
deepened its anti-fascist work, linked to the struggle against
racism in South
Africa itself.
In fact, right from the early 1940s, Party membership
started growing significantly. Between1941 and 1943 the
membership of the Party
grew fourfold, with active district committees in all major
urban areas of our
country. Party activism in this period is aptly captured in the
book ‘Fifty
Fighting Years’, thus:
“The rousing campaigns
of the Party, as well
as the inspiring defence of their socialist country by the
Soviet people, brought
the Party a greater measure of support among all sections
of the people than
ever before. The circulation of the Guardian and
Inkululeko rose to record levels;
party membership increased rapidly; Communists were
elected to City Councils in
Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban and East London. The
growth of the Party’s
influence and the leftward trend of the people, were
reflected in such diverse
phenomena as the growth in size and militancy of the trade
union movement,
notably of the African Mine Workers Union, the development
of the pioneer
peasant movement, A Maliba’s Zoutpansberg Balemi
(Ploughman’s) Association, the
popularity of the servicemen’s association the Springbok
Legion in which
members of the Party like Jack Hodgson and Cecil Williams
held leading positions.
“The
Cape
Town district demonstrated its strength in 1943 when Sam
Kahn and Betty
Radford, then editor of the Guardian, were elected on the
Party platform to the
City Council”.
In fact later Sam Kahn became a communist member of
parliament – remembered by amongst other things his reading of
the Communist
Manifesto so that it could be in the Hansard – and Fred Carneson
elected onto
the Cape Provincial Council then. There is incidentally an
exhibition about
Fred Carneson at the Umsunduzi Museum until November this year.
Please go and
view it!
The Communist Party in the 1940s was to be found in all
sites and fronts of struggle – in communities, in the trade
union movement, in electoral
contests and legislatures, in the rural struggles, on the media
front
pioneering progressive journalism, and in practically every
arena of struggle.
It therefore came as no surprise that one of the first political
(and
legislative actions) to be taken by the racist National Party
after its
electoral victory in 1948 was to outlaw our Party by passing the
Suppression of
Communism Act, 1950.
Those who tell us today that we must be in some but not
other sites of struggle either do not understand the history and
role of the
SACP in our revolution, or they want to weaken and ultimately
destroy the Party.
So today when our own programme, the South African Road to
Socialism, as
adopted at our 2012 Ngoye Congress, instructs communists to be
in all sites and
fronts of struggle, it is merely reinforcing the historical role
of our Party.
It was these heroic struggles that shaped Moses Mabhida, and
clearly had a lasting impact on his life and politics.
Moses Mabhida, a
communist, trade union and ANC leader
After the Defiance Campaign of 1952, a period during which
8000 people went to jail in protest against the criminal
apartheid laws, the Pietermaritzburg
District Committee of the Communist Party – the SACP having been
resuscitated
in 1953 as an underground party – suggested that Cde Mabhida
resign from his
job in order to work full-time for the trade union movement. He
became an
organizer for the Howick Rubber Workers’ Union and the Chemical
Workers in Pietermaritzburg.
Cde Mabhida was very instrumental in the building of SACTU
and at its first congress at which he was a participant in 1955,
he was elected
one of the four Vice-Presidents of the federation. He
contributed enormously in
building a strong trade union movement in this province as a
whole.
We should therefore not take it as an accident for
communists to be playing an active role as trade unionists, as
this is very
much part of the history of our Party. Our task today is to
recruit more communists
in the ranks of the trade union movement to join the SACP. It is
the task of
the SACP to continue to produce trade unionists steeped in the
Congress
tradition, guided by the Freedom Charter, and ensuring that
COSATU unions in
particular remain red trade unions. We must produce unionists
who understand
our Alliance, that it is a revolutionary alliance and not a
bargaining chamber.
Cde Mabhida also played a very important role in the ANC in
the 1950s, and played a big part in the preparations for the
Congress of the People
in Kliptown where the Freedom Charter was adopted. This was, by
the way, the
only real Congress of the People in our movement. During this
period Cde
Mabhida also became chairman of the ANC Working Committee in
this Province, as
well as Chair of the Durban District of the Communist Party. He
was at the same
time at the centre of every mass activity and campaign in the
province.
Cde Moses Mabhida was elected onto the National Executive
Committee of the ANC around 1956 and in 1959-1959 was acting
Chair of the Natal
ANC.
After the declaration of the state of emergency by the
apartheid regime, Cde Mabhida was instructed by both the ANC and
the SACP to leave
the country and organize anti-apartheid and solidarity
activities with the
struggle of the South African people. It was during this period
that cde
Mabhida’s stature as an internationalist also began to grow. He
worked as the
SACTU representative at the World Federation of Trade Unions
(WFTU). In 1963,
whilst attached at the WFTU headquarters, cde Mabhida was
instructed by the ANC
President, Oliver Tambo, to leave the solidarity field and to
work full time
for Umkhonto weSizwe MK). Cde Mabhida was a central component
and commander in
opening the Natal front for MK, and many comrades from this
front still have
very vivid memories of the final instructions they got from
Bab’Mabhida as they
illegally entered the country for MK underground work.
So when the front of armed activity opened, communists,
including Cde Moses Mabhida, were there and amongst the first to
join the ranks
of MK. So our slogan is
very
appropriate, ‘Communist Cadres to the Front’; and we perhaps
need to add ‘In
All Sites and Fronts of Struggle’!
After the death of Cde Moses Kotane in 1978, Cde Mabhida was
elected General Secretary of the SACP in November 1979, a
position he held until
his death on 8 March 1986. Cde Mabhida was a committed
communist, who knew that
all good communists must be in the ANC. Not only must a good
communist be in
the ANC, but he or she must be prepared to serve in whatever
capacity assigned
by the ANC! Cde Mabhida died of a heart attack in Mozambique on
8 March 1986.
In his eulogy to Cde Mabhida at the funeral – which
President Samora Machel of Mozambique proclaimed as a full state
funeral – the President
of the ANC, Cde Oliver Tambo made what has possibly become the
most quoted
statement about our Tripartite Alliance:
“Ours is not merely a
paper alliance, created at conference tables and formalized
through the signing
of documents and representing only an agreement by leaders. Our
Alliance is a
living organism that has grown out of struggle”.
Cde Tambo, at that state funeral, also observed that Mabhida
had been educated in “the stern university of mass struggle… It
is rarely given
to a people that they should produce a single person who
epitomizes their hopes
and expresses their common resolve as Moses Mabhida did. In
simple language he
could convey the aspirations of all our people in their
magnificent variety,
explain the fears and prejudices of the unorganized, and sense
the feelings of
even the most humble among our people”.
Following his death, his friend and fellow revolutionary,
Samora Machel said: “We shall be the guardians of his body. Men
who die fighting,
who refuse to surrender, who serve the people and the ideals to
the last
breath, are victors. Mabhida is a victorious combatant”.
Many of us here today were part of the reburial of cde Moses
Mabhida, after the exhumation of his body in Mozambique, in
November 2006 here in
Pietermaritzburg. At
that reburial
Nokuthula Mabhida, one of Cde Moses Mabhida’s daughters said:
‘This is a moving
moment for us. The tears that you see are not tears of pain but
tears of joy,
because for years we have been trying to get our father reburied
in South
Africa’. Long live the memory of Cde Stimela, long live!
Learning from
Mabhida’s example: Some of the tasks of the SACP today
Our task today as communists is to tell over and over again
the story of Moses Mabhida and other revolutionaries. But it
must not be for
the sake of telling a story, it is so that we can continue to
learn appropriate
lessons from their lives and struggles, as part of learning from
our own
history. It is so that we do what Jack Simons was saying ‘Great
men in history
recognize the necessity and respond through appropriate action’.
Intensify the
struggle against the abuse of women and children
It is indeed an important co-incidence that Cde Mabhida died
on March 8, which is International Women’s Day. So therefore, in
future we must
also use this day to honour our women and their important role
in the liberation
and reconstruction of our country.
In the true tradition of our Party, we must intensify the
recruitment of women into the ranks of our Party. We can be
proud of the role
that outstanding Communist women have played in struggle – among
them Dora Tamana, Ray
Alexander, Josie Mpama,
Dorothy Nyembe, Betty Radford, and Ncumisa Kondlo, to mention
but a few. Few
know that in 1931 our Party established a Women’s Department to
‘organise women
as women, to draw into active struggle the proletarian woman in
the factories,
the peasant woman and also the wife of the petty owner’. During
this period the
Party called for a Women’s National Conference to unify and
consolidate the
struggles of women. It was therefore not an accident that
communist women
played an important role in women’s organisations such as the
ANC Women’s
League and the Federation of South African Women. Organisation
of women must be
central in all of our campaigning and organizational work as the
SACP. We are
not doing badly on this front as about 45% of members of the
Party are women.
But we must build on this, and it must be reflected in our
structures.
However, the organization of women must not be an abstract
‘feel good’ task, but must be rooted in the important struggles
of the day. We
are gathering today in the midst of further exposition of the
prevalence of
violence against women and children in our society, including
rape, mutilation
and murder. Let us use March 8 to intensify the struggles
against this scourge
and mobilise and educate our communities about the importance of
gender
equality and defence of women and children. The SACP has called
upon all
communists to work inside all community organisations and NGOs
that are part of
this important struggle against women abuse. That would be a
most appropriate
way also to honour the memory and legacy of Cde Moses Mabhida.
Strengthening our
Alliance
Mabhida was a personified embodiment of our Tripartite
Alliance. He represented both the independence of each of the
Alliance partners
and the inter-dependence within our Alliance. Each of the
Alliance partners in
their own way took responsibility for the national democratic
revolution. The
SACTU he was leading defeated attempts to be captured by either
the ultra-left
or the liberals. Cde Mabhida protected and ensured an
independent, militant,
but Congress-aligned trade union movement. Independence of each
of our Alliance
partners does not mean oppositionism to the ANC, nor submission
or becoming a conveyor
belt for the ANC. It means being principled allies to the ANC!
Independence of
each of the Alliance partners must be a source of strength to
our Alliance as a
whole, rather than a subtraction! Mabhida knew that to lead
SACTU as a
progressive trade union component of our Alliance did not mean
being above, or
oppositionist, to the national liberation movement!
Honour Mabhida,
revitalize a campaigning SACP
The SACP has decided to revitalize some of our key campaigns
in 2013. The revitalization of our financial sector campaign is
going to be the
mainstay of SACP work going forward, and ensuring that resources
in the
financial sector are invested in a manner that supports
investment into
infrastructure and into the productive economy. The SACP will
engage COSATU on
ensuring that workers’ provident and other funds are invested in
such a manner
that they reinforce a new growth path for our country and the
strengthening of
our social economy.
The SACP Central Committee has also decided that because
2013 is the centenary of the notorious and obnoxious 1913 Land
Act, our rural districts
in particular must revitalize the campaign for land and agrarian
reform. Much as
the land question is not only a challenge for rural areas, but
our rural
districts must lead. This is also an important dimension of
realizing 2013 as
the year of the SACP District!
In the course of our campaigning it is important that the
struggle against corruption informs all what we do. The SACP
must refuse the NGO-isation
of the struggle against corruption. It is a struggle that must
remain a
mass-based and mass driven struggle that is not tainted by
unknown sources of
funding. The energy of the mass of the workers and the poor must
be the
principal driver of the struggle against corruption!
The battle of ideas
and proletarian internationalism
We are meeting here today at an institution of higher
education. I want to challenge our entire progressive student
movement. Is this
history I have just told being taught or engaged in our
institutions? This
country is free today not least because of the contribution made
by communists
and leaders like Moses Mabhida. Over and above the demands for
access to
university, what is our progressive youth alliance doing to
challenge most of
the reactionary rubbish they are taught in their lecture halls?
At the very
least if the progressive youth alliance is not being taught
this, is it holding
student reading circles on progressive literature and about the
heroism of the national
liberation movement and our people?
Capitalism is today in yet another crisis, partly as a
result of the very same ideas that are being taught with
impunity in many of
our higher education institutions; the false idea that the
market is the solution
to the problems facing humanity today. Let us be like Moses
Mabhida, a
socialist and proletarian internationalist, for a consistent
struggle against
capitalism!
Long Live the
Memory
of Stimela Mabhida, Long Live!