Sharpeville Massacre

 
(thing <http://everything2.com/user/Frankie/writeups/Sharpeville+Massacre> )    
 by Frankie <http://everything2.com/user/Frankie>       Mon Oct 21 2002 at 
7:23:01      

The Massacre at Sharpeville, the township outside Vereeniging 
<http://everything2.com/title/Vereeniging>  on the banks of the Vaal River, on 
March 21, 1960 <http://everything2.com/title/March+21%252C+1960>  made 
headlines throughout the world. Scores of people died and three times as many 
were injured, which highlighted the plight of Africans in South Africa 
<http://everything2.com/title/South+Africa>  to the world in a way it never had 
been before. The PAC <http://everything2.com/title/Pan+Africanist+Congress>  
claim the day as their most successful political campaign, while the rest of 
the South African political sphere mark it as a tragedy.


Background


Vereeniging is the site of the signing of the treaty that ended the Anglo-Boer 
War <http://everything2.com/title/Anglo-Boer+War> . British victory lead to the 
Union of South Africa in 1910, and the last hope of African rights being 
recognised without resistance, fading. The African National Congress 
<http://everything2.com/title/African+National+Congress>  was formed in 1909. 
Leading up to the Second World War 
<http://everything2.com/title/Second+World+War> , a large contingent in the 
ruling United Party <http://everything2.com/title/United+Party>  were unhappy 
about having to support Britain: their sympathies were very much on the side of 
Adolf Hitler <http://everything2.com/title/Adolf+Hitler>  and his radical ideas 
about racial supremacy. 

After the war, a group broke away, calling themselves the Herstigte Nationale 
Party <http://everything2.com/title/Herstigte+Nationale+Party>  (Reformed or 
Pure National Party). In later years this party would go through revision many 
times, with a group breaking away and calling themselves the National Party 
<http://everything2.com/title/National+Party> , which in post-apartheid 
<http://everything2.com/title/apartheid>  years would affirmed their aboutface 
on policy with the name New National Party. The Herstigte Nationale Party 
contested the 1948 elections and came out in front. Immediately they set about 
legislating their policies. These are discussed further elsewhere 
<http://everything2.com/title/South+African+History> . 

Important in this context are the formation of the Bantustans 
<http://everything2.com/title/Bantustan>  and the Pass Laws. The Bantustans 
were illegitimate"independent homelands and states" which operated under much 
the same mechanisms as the present day Palestinian 
<http://everything2.com/title/Palestinian>  states. Under the Pass Laws, all 
Africans were required to obtain a permit to live outside the Bantustan to 
which they were assigned (based on home language, or if you will, tribe). The 
government had the discretion to nominate the place where the person could 
legally reside, which depending on the mood of the government official, was at 
times different to that of the person's spouse.

All Africans over the age of 16 were legally required to hold a Pass, and 
Passes to live outside the Bantustans were only granted for employment or 
employment seeking purposes. Employment seeking Passes were only valid for 14 
days, and if caught with a lapsed Pass people were deported to the Homelands or 
imprisoned. Sentences were served on prison farms under barbaric conditions. 

African prisoners on the potato prison farms in Bethel 
<http://everything2.com/title/Bethel>  in the former Eastern Transvaal 
(Mpumalanga <http://everything2.com/title/Mpumalanga> ) wore nothing but 
hessian sacks and slept on damp cement floors. With bare hands and feet, they 
worked the potato fields from dawn to dusk, being whipped by jailers on 
horseback <http://everything2.com/title/P-O-N-I-E-S> . Once a day they ate a 
meal of half-cooked dried maize ("pap <http://everything2.com/title/pap> ") 
with no protein. Many died from disease or torture before their two to six 
month sentences, for being in the wrong place at the wrong time, were complete. 


Political Climate


The African National Congress (ANC) was the oldest and most established 
organisation of African resistance. In its early days, its leaders were 
Africanist <http://everything2.com/title/Africanist>  - Africa for the 
Africans, deportation for the settler Europeans - but by the late 1950's many 
of them had revised their political ways to include all South Africans in their 
dreams for the future. The leadership was divided over the future of the 
struggle. Thus far it had been peaceful, thanks to the influence of Gandhi 
<http://everything2.com/title/Gandhi>  who spent many years in South Africa, 
and campaign of mass action -- boycotts, strikes, civil disobedience and 
non-cooperation -- was planned, kicking off with an anti-Pass demonstration in 
April 1960. Many argued the ineffectiveness of non-violence and proposed the 
use of violence.

In early 1959, a group of ANC leaders broke away from the party and formed the 
Pan Africanist Congress of Azania 
<http://everything2.com/title/Pan+Africanist+Congress> , the PAC. They planned 
to announce their arrival on the political scene by upstaging the ANC's Pass 
protest with a nationwide strike on March 21, 1960 
<http://everything2.com/title/March+21%252C+1960> . 

As early as 1946, the government had used force against peacefully striking 
mineworkers in the Witwatersrand <http://everything2.com/title/Witwatersrand> . 
The PAC, under the leadership of 36 year old Robert Sobukwe 
<http://everything2.com/title/Robert+Sobukwe> , made it clear in their 
door-to-door campaign for support for the action that it was to be a peaceful 
demonstration. Slogans such as Izwe Lethu iAfrica (Our Land, Africa), and 
Sobukwe's name were sounding out throughout the country. On March 18, 1960 
<http://everything2.com/title/March+18%252C+1960> , Sobukwe called a press 
conference in Johannesburg <http://everything2.com/title/Johannesburg>  where 
he announced the PAC's first phase in their campaign for the liberation of 
South Africa. 

The action called for all Pass-carrying Africans to leave their passes at home, 
march to police stations and hand themselves over for arrest. Since 1953's 
Abolition of Passes and Co-ordination of Native Documents Act, the Pass book 
had been called the "reference book", but the changes were in name only. 
Through its action, the PAC sought, not only to upstage the ANC, but also to 
bring down apartheid. With enough of the labour force behind bars, South 
African industry would grind to a halt, holding the government to ransom. It 
was as idealistic a notion as Africanism.


March 21, 1960


On the eve of the event, Sobukwe reiterated to the leadership the importance of 
observing absolute non-violence. Ironic given that the organisation had 
foundered itself on the idea that non-violence had passed its sell-by date. 
Nevertheless, the bloody end to the day was never intended or solicited by 
either the PAC or the demonstrators. Many of the protests around the country 
went off without a hitch. 

In Langa <http://everything2.com/title/Langa>  and Nyanga 
<http://everything2.com/title/Nyanga>  in Cape Town 
<http://everything2.com/title/Cape+Town> , five people where shot dead by 
police and in Vanderbijl Park <http://everything2.com/title/Vanderbijl+Park> , 
the death toll was two. The place where things really got nasty was Sharpeville 
<http://everything2.com/title/Sharpeville> , the location on the outskirts of 
Vereeniging <http://everything2.com/title/Vereeniging> .

The PAC branch at Sharpeville was chaired by Nyakale Tsolo 
<http://everything2.com/title/Nyakale+Tsolo> . He and his members approached 
nearly all the houses and the men's hostel in the township ahead of the strike 
on the Monday. On the morning, not a single bus left Sharpeville to take 
workers into Vereeniging. PAC task force members started lining up marchers in 
the streets before daybreak -- the time they would usually be leaving for work. 
The march on the police station had been planned, with prearranged meeting 
points for the different groups of marchers. At the final assembly point, the 
marchers numbered more than 10,000 men, women and children, chanting slogans 
and singing freedom songs 
<http://everything2.com/title/Nkosi+Sikelel%2527+iAfrika> .

Izwe lethu iAfrica - Our land, Africa

Awaphele ampasti - Down with passes

Sobukwe Sikhokhle - Lead us Sobukwe

Forward to Independence, Tomorrow the United States of Africa

When the marches arrived at the police station in Sharpeville, they met a 
heavily-armed group of police outside, many atop British-made Saracen armoured 
cars. Tsolo was at the front with other members of the Sharpeville Branch 
Executive, putting into action the PAC's Leaders in Front policy. Tsolo asked 
the commanding policeman to arrest them for refusal to carry Passes. Initially 
the policeman refused. 

The chanting and singing continued, which would have been extremely 
intimidating for the police who would have been conscious that should the crowd 
turn nasty, their weapons would not save them. They needn't have worried about 
the crowd, but amid the chanting and the inspired singing, with their backs to 
the police station walls, they would have needed much convincing. Around 11am, 
they relented and arrested the leaders. 

News of the Sharpeville success had spread to other regions and journalists 
were rushing over from Johannesburg. By the time they got there, they really 
had a story to report. The leaderless crowd had upped the volume of their songs 
and chants, and eventually one of the policemen had cracked. He fired and his 
fellow officers followed suit. Within two minutes, 705 bullets had been fired 
and the crowd had dispersed and scores of dead and wounded lay bleeding on the 
ground. At the end of the day there were 69 dead and 186 wounded. Most of the 
dead had died from bullets entering their backs. 


Aftermath


Carel de Wet, MP for Vanderbijl Park and former member of apartheid implementer 
Vorster's <http://everything2.com/title/Barend+Vorster>  cabinet, spoke from 
the Court of St James where he was serving his second term as Ambassador: Why 
did the police kill only two kaffirs <http://everything2.com/title/kaffir>  in 
my constituency?

The Minister of Justice temporarily suspended the Pass Laws and the government 
imposed a nationwide State of Emergency 
<http://everything2.com/title/State+of+Emergency>  and introduced legislation 
banning the PAC and the ANC. 18,000 anti-apartheid activists, black, coloured 
and white, were arrested and detained around the country and Sobukwe and his 
peers were put on trial. They were convicted and imprisoned for 3 years. In 
1963, however, the government introduced what became known as the Sobukwe 
Clause, allowing them to detain people after the conclusion of their sentences. 
They only used the clause once. Sobukwe was eventually released -- into house 
arrest in Kimberley <http://everything2.com/title/Kimberley>  -- in 1969. He 
died, still under house arrest, in 1978.Stanley Motjuwadi 
<http://everything2.com/title/Stanley+Motjuwadi>  recalled in the November 22, 
1972 <http://everything2.com/title/November+22%252C+1972>  edition of Drum 
<http://everything2.com/title/Drum>  magazine: 

        A day after the Sharpeville shootings I had an interview in 
Johannesburg's Fort prison with Mangaliso Robert Sobukwe ... He was awaiting 
trial on a charge of incitement and seemed to have aged overnight. He was 
depressed and almost at the point of tears - the Sharpeville tragedy had really 
hit him hard.

The arrival of the journalists on the scene so swiftly (since they were already 
on their way) meant that for once the South African public got an inkling of 
what was happening just down the road. In April 1960, at the annual Rand Easter 
Show <http://everything2.com/title/Rand+Easter+Show> , David Pratt 
<http://everything2.com/title/David+Pratt> , an English-speaking farmer, fired 
two shots through Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoed's 
<http://everything2.com/title/Hendrik+Verwoed>  head. Verwoed survived, only to 
be stabbed to death in the House of Parliament in 1966. Pratt told the 
magistrate he had done it because Verwoed was leading the country into 
darkness. Pratt was sent to a mental asylum and never heard from again.

While Verwoed was recuperating from his gunshot wounds, Paul Sauer 
<http://everything2.com/title/Paul+Sauer>  acted as Prime Minister. The PAC 
organised a demonstration outside Parliament in Cape Town, which attracted 
30,000 demonstrators. Sauer addressed the rally and called for a new book for 
South Africa, saying that things could not be allowed to slide back to 
conditions that had created such a crisis as Sharpeville. Sauer was quickly 
dropped from the cabinet and died a backbencher.

Within in the borders of South Africa, Sharpeville only made things worse for 
Africans. Internationally, however, things began to change. The Johannesburg 
Stock Exchange <http://everything2.com/title/Johannesburg+Stock+Exchange>  
suffered a huge blow, as companies pulled out of South Africa to the tune of 
£43 million of foreign capital. The United Nations Security Council 
<http://everything2.com/title/United+Nations+Security+Council>  brought up the 
question of apartheid for the first time. In April 1960, the Council called on 
the South African government to "initiate measures aimed at bringing about 
racial harmony based on equality... and abandon its policies of apartheid and 
racial discrimination." When the government refused, the international arena 
turned their backs and South Africa was expelled from the Commonwealth. Only 
Ian Smith's <http://everything2.com/title/Ian+Smith>  regime in neighbouring 
Zimbabwe <http://everything2.com/title/Zimbabwe>  was less popular. 



Further reading: "THE SHARPEVILLE MASSACRE - Its historic significance in the 
struggle against apartheid" by David M. Sibeko - Available online at 
http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/misc/sharplle.html

________________________________

Sources:

*       http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/misc/sharplle.html
*       
http://www.africanhistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa-SharpevilleMassacre-a.htm
*       http://www.paca.org.za/panhist.htm

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