SA Working Class and the NDR
We meet in the UJ Doornfontein Library. The next session will be as
follows: Date: 25 March (Thursday) Time: 17h00 sharp to 18h30 sharp
Venue: The Library, University of Johannesburg, 37 Nind Street,
Doornfontein, Johannesburg (former Technikon Witwatersrand). Cars enter
from the slip road to the left of the bridge on Siemert Road. Topic:
The Struggle for Democracy.
For this last session of our “Basics” course, we have looked at
democracy, armed struggle, and popular unity-in-action, in terms of
various countries of the world. The National Democratic Revolution is
not a South African invention. The NDR is a worldwide phenomenon, but
it has also generated a specifically South African literature. The NDR
is a bridge between the national and international struggles.
Joe Slovo [pictured above] published the SA Working Class and the
National Democratic Revolution (for a file download see the link below)
at a time when he was the General Secretary of the South African
Communist Party in 1988, when the Party was still clandestine. The end
of the SACP’s 40-year period of illegality was to come two years later.
Like many political documents, the SA Working Class and the NDR takes
shape around a polemical response to contemporary opponents who may no
longer be well remembered (in this case the particular “workerists” and
compromisers of the time that Slovo mentions on the first page of the
document).
But as with the polemics of Marx, Engels and Lenin, so also with
Slovo’s. In the course of the argument against otherwise long-forgotten
foes he was obliged to set up a fully concrete, rounded assessment of
the meaning of the NDR. He succeeded brilliantly and his pamphlet still
remains today as the best single and definitive text on the NDR.
Slovo quickly establishes the class-alliance basis of the NDR and
quotes Lenin saying that: “the advanced class ... should fight with…
energy and enthusiasm for the cause of the whole people, at the head of
the whole people”. This advanced class is the working class. Slovo goes
on to write of the continuity of the NDR and of the institutional
organisation that is the bricks-and-mortar of nation-building.
Slovo’s is a long document but it has many possibilities as the basis
for a discussion, and that is always our purpose: dialogue.
Click here to download the text of The South African Working Class and
the NDR, 1988, Slovo (14985 words)


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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 3/24/2010 12:10:00 PM

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