Induction, Part 2c
Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge, El Lissitsky, 1919
Mass and Vanguard
We are now at the conclusion of the second part of our Induction
course. We have completed our description of the Party, and in a general way,
of the mass organisations. The course will now provide materials that will
assist in organisational induction for all kinds of purposes; that is, not only
in the Party, but also in the non-Party mass movements. It will deal with
specific kinds of mass organisation.
Then the course will look at the inter-relationship of such
mass organisations within the local environment, and the key role that the
Party has to play in these localities, knitting the mass organisations into an
alliance. Finally, it will look at the broad organisational tasks that have
been set for this and coming years by the Party, and by the movement as a whole,
led by the ANC.
At this point, although without a special text, it can
assist us to reflect upon the question of Mass and Vanguard. The Mass/Vanguard
relationship is somewhat tacit in the literature. It is not always described as
a separate problem.
Lack of understanding of the Mass/Vanguard relationship can
lead to serious errors of amateurism, and particularly so among new recruits.
There can be an urge to “do things as the Party”. Whereas the Party is not the
actor on the historic stage. The masses are the historical Subject of History,
not the Party.
If the Party feels obliged to do work that could be done by
a mass democratic structure, then the Party is guilty of having failed to organise
and mobilise the necessary structure.
When the Party is substituting itself for the masses, it is
in error. It will burn up its limited resources like that, and it will neglect
its true role.
You are properly inducted when you know that your main work
as a communist has to be done outside of the confines of the Party, among
people who are not communists. This is why the branch life of the Party is
important. SACP branches provide fellowship and solidarity to the leaders of
the working class.
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