Induction, Part 1c
Chinese Party Card
Joining the Party
Attached are two documents. One is the SACP’s advice, given
on its web site, but slightly edited, as to how to join. The other document is the
SACP’s application form. Let us hope that you are already through the process
of joining the SACP, because it can be full of pitfalls. One reason for
studying it as a process, is so that one can assist others to come through it
successfully, and in good time.
Apart from the difficulty of joining the Party, one may also
take a critical view of the “duties” and the “pillars” as described on the SACP
web page, because for the purposes of this course, we need to develop them into
an integrated (i.e. “concrete”) understanding of the nature and the purpose of
the Party.
The SACP is a vanguard Party, not by claim, or by
inheritance, but only by virtue of study. What we call “political education” is
not merely a re-telling of the laid-down nature of the existing Party, but it is
the very essence of the process that the Party is engaged in.
There is no higher authority than the Party that could award
it the franchise of revolution. Nor does the Party gain its leading role by competitively
destroying the efforts of others. From the beginning, for example in the
Communist Manifesto of 1848, the communists have said they would not do that.
The communists do not claim any kind of monopoly.
It follows that whatever role the Party may play is founded
upon nothing else than study. It is because we study that we are able to see
the whole picture, if we can at all. It is because we study that we are able to
see beyond our immediate self-interest, whereas the mass organisations are less
well equipped to do so. The mass organisations are based on simple, mutual, sectional
self-interest.
This is what distinguishes the mass organisations from the
vanguard Party. The mass organisations, including trade unions, rest on the
immediate self-perceived self-interest of the participants, and this is how it
should be.
The Party encourages people to organise democratically,
according to their lights, even though limited in the first place by
self-interest. It is we as the Party who have made ourselves professionally
responsible, by virtue of study, for being able to see wider than immediate
self-interest of sections, towards the best interests of the whole society.
Then it becomes an obligation to study, because other than what
is gained by study, the Party has no rights whatsoever. If you are not prepared
to study and to continue studying, you have no business to be joining the
Communist Party.
Nobody is obliged to be a communist. Nor is it crucial that
there are very large numbers of communists. The numbers that are required are
those that are sufficient to maintain the Party's mission of education, organisation and mobilisation, and no
more.
The Party does not set out to “convert” the whole population. The Party does not set out, for example, to convert every sports
club into a political cell. To the extent that a Party member has
a communist duty in a sports club, it would be, firstly, to help make it a
better sports club, and then, perhaps, a more democratic one; but not to try to annex it to the communist party.
In the next part of this course we will look more deeply
into the necessity for mass democratic organisation. We will draw out further,
the distinction between, and the functional organic relation between, the
democratic mass organisations and their vanguard Party of professional
revolutionaries.
The work of communists in any country is done outside their
Party, among non-communists.
- The above is to
introduce an original reading-text: How to join the Party; SACP application form.
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