National Democratic
Revolution, Part 3
Worker-Peasant Monument, Moscow
National-Scale
Democracy
We have founded this study of
the National Democratic Revolution (NDR) on the practical necessity, as well as
the historical fact, of class alliance, and most pointedly on Lenin’s report to
the 2CCI on 26 July 1920, on the National and Colonial Question.
A class alliance, or in other
words a popular front, or a unity-in-action, was always necessary for the
defeat of colonialism. Such class alliances were successfully put together in
many countries, including South Africa, as the tactical road to strategic
political independence.
Such an alliance is what is
broadly known as a National Liberation Movement. What the movement is supposed
to do is called the National Democratic Revolution. As much as it was
nationalist, the anti-colonial liberation movement was equally international in
character. The Worker-Peasant Alliance (hammer and sickle) is not just a
Russian thing. It is universal.
The NDR’s international
dimension is solidarity with the National Liberation struggles of others, in
the common fight against Imperialism.
Expansion of democracy
The National Democratic
Revolution’s national dimension was the enlargement of democracy. This the
Imperialists invariably opposed with divide-and-rule schemes of provincial
federation, regionalism, “Balkanisation” et
cetera. Hence the continuing struggle against Provincialism, and the
on-going defence of Provincialism by the reactionary remnants in our country,
South Africa, today.
We now need to look
specifically at the expansion of democracy to the national level. Why? Because,
for revolutionary purposes, the entire working class, and the entirety of the
allied classes, must unite all of their potential support, in numerical, and in
territorial terms. This is a practical necessity, if the liberation forces are
to defeat the well-concentrated class enemy, which is the monopoly and
Imperialist-allied bourgeoisie.
The battle to spread
democracy to the farthest corners of the country, and to the whole population
in terms of class, race and gender, is also the battle against regional and
ethnic chauvinism. This effort aims to create a centralised parliamentary
democracy, or democratic republic, even if, as Lenin pointed out in the report
to the 2CCI, such a democratic republic can only be bourgeois in nature - at
first.
The structure of
parliamentary democracy (i.e. the democratic republic) is the organising scheme
within which the polity at the national scale is conceived and arranged. It is
not sufficient in itself. It is a shell that must be populated with organised
elements, elements which must also be extended to the national scale, just as
much as the parliamentary franchise is.
Among these organised
elements are:
- The mass movement of national liberation
- The vanguard party of the working class
- The national (industrial) trade unions and their national centre
- Class-conscious national media of communication
- Many mass organisations at the national level, including Women’s and Youth organisations.
Communists can be found
organising, educating and mobilising, as is their duty according to the SACP
Constitution, in all of these areas, and this has been the case throughout the
90 years of the Party’s life. The texts that are collected together in the
linked document below clearly demonstrate that the communists, even before the
formation of the Party, were concerned with the extension of organisation to
all parts of the population.
Early years of the Communist
Party of South Africa and the ANC
The attached document, which
is itself a compilation, shows that one predominately-white precursor of the
Party was acutely aware that its own aspirations could not be fulfilled unless
the Black Proletariat was mobilised to take the lead in the struggle. This precursor
was the International Socialist League. It, like Lenin, had opposed the
Imperialist war that broke out in 1914. It was later to become a component part
of the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) on its formation in 1921. “No Labour
Movement without the Black Proletariat,” it said.
After its 1921 formation, the
Party quickly became predominantly black in membership, and the black cadres
soon exercised a leading role in mass organisations, of which the biggest, in
the 1920s, was the Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union (ICU), formed in
1919. Note that the (white)
Labour Party had been formed in 1908, and the African National Congress in
1912.
The expulsion of communists
from the ICU, and in particular of J.A.
(Jimmy) La Guma, ICU General Secretary; E.J. Khaile, ICU Financial Secretary and John Gomas, Cape Provincial Secretary, was a set-back for the
working class and as it turned out, it was fatal for the ICU. This episode is also
recorded in the attached document.
In 1927 Josia Gumede was elected ANC President and he travelled to meet the
top leadership of the Soviet Union. That year was the tenth anniversary of the
Russian revolution. He travelled with Jimmy La Guma, a member of the party,
secretary of an ANC branch in Cape Town and a recently-expelled
leader of the Industrial and Commercial Workers Union (ICU). La Guma was
expelled by the ICU together with E.J Khaile for being communists. In that very
same year Khaile was elected Secretary-General of the ANC at its national
conference in 1927.
The CPSA and the ANC drew
closer together, though not without problems. But the alliance was endorsed by
the Sixth Comintern Congress in the famous “Black Republic Thesis” resolution, which said among others:
“The Party should pay particular attention to the
embryonic national organisations among the natives, such as the African National Congress. The Party,
while retaining its full independence, should participate in these
organisations, should seek to broaden and extend their activity…
“In the field of trade union work the Party must
consider that its main task consists in the organisation of the native workers
into trade unions as well as propaganda and work for the setting up of a South
African trade union centre embracing black and white workers.
“The Communist
Party cannot confine itself to the general slogan of ‘Let there
be no whites and no blacks'. The Communist Party must understand the
revolutionary importance of the national and agrarian questions.
“A correct formulation of this task and intensive
propagation of the chief slogan of a native republic will
result not in the alienation of the white workers from the Communist Party, not
in segregation of the natives, but, on the contrary, in the building up of a
solid united front of all toilers against capitalism and imperialism.”
In the attached document, the
Comintern resolution is followed by the famous Cradock Letter written by Moses Kotane in 1934, five years before
he became General Secretary of the Party. It called for the “Africanisation or
Afrikanisation” of the CPSA, something that had clearly not yet fully taken
place in 1934, five years after the adoption of the “Black Republic Thesis”.
The story continues in the next instalment.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Black
Proletariat, ICU, Black Republic Thesis, Kotane’s Cradock Letter.
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