Reminder!
The Communist University will be meeting in the SACP boardroom, COSATU
House, Braamfontein until further notice. The next session will be as
follows: Date: 10 June (Thursday) Time: 17h00 sharp to 18h30 sharp
Venue: The SACP boardroom, 3rd floor, COSATU House, 1 Leyds Street,
corner Biccard, Braamfontein, Johannesburg. Topic: Umsebenzi Online on
Women (see below)

CU, No Woman, No Revolution, Part 10 (final part)

Umsebenzi Online on Women
To complete the picture of the women’s movement that the CU has tried
to provide in our ten-part “No Woman, No Revolution” set, the last main
document (linked below) consists of four articles published in
Umsebenzi Online from the beginning of 2006 to the present.
These four articles describe in firm and forthright terms what is the
position of the South African Communist Party on the question of women
at this time. These articles sit well with the previous parts of our
series. They should be read carefully because they represent the SACP's
deliberate pronouncements, as distinct from the discursive researches
of the CU.
2006 was the year when the CU did its first “No Woman, No Revolution”
series, from February to May, meeting at the Women’s Jail, Constitution
Hill, Johannesburg. August 2006 was when we saw the launch of a
“Progressive Woman’s Movement” that was and remains opposite in
character from what the Communist University had imagined was needed.
The Communist University is not a constitutional structure of the SACP.
It supports the SACP, the ANC, and COSATU. But for pedagogical reasons,
if for no other, it must be allowed to speculate, without any prejudice
to those organisations.
So here are some speculative theses on the question of women in South
Africa:
- Women, as such, have no interests that are antagonistic to those of
men, but women have a common and particular felt experience among
themselves, as women, of the oppression that capitalism has brought to
their lives.
- Therefore there is a basis for working women to organise as a mass,
by which is meant a small or large number of people who feel a common
disadvantage in society, and who in consequence organise themselves
together for their collective good.
- Women’s mass organisations have the same requirement as trade unions
and political-vanguard organisations, to be both democratic and
centralist. Therefore women’s organisations should have individual
membership and branches, hold periodic national congresses, have
corporate personality, and have a constitution to ensure democracy.
- The SACP, as a vanguard political organisation of the working class,
is designed to relate to such mass organisations, just as it relates to
trade union organisations, and others.
- As a matter of historical fact, the ANC, through the ANCWL, has on
four successive occasions since its founding in 1948, acted to ensure
that the above kind of democratic, mass, individual-membership
general-purpose women’s movement could not flourish. The ANCWL, under
pressure from the ANC, blighted FEDSAW, the UDF women’s structures, and
the Women’s National Coalition, and it now blights the Progressive
Women’s Movement.
- The ANC adopted “non-sexism” in the 1980s, and the current South
African Constitution is non-sexist, but in practice these provisions
mean little as compared to the material non-existence of a mass women’s
movement that has membership and democracy, and which is politically
aligned to the working class and to the cause of socialism.
- Very little of the above is discussed in the general public realm.
What discussion there may be is often based on unexamined vulgar
bourgeois-feminist, eclectic and post-modernist precepts. The situation
is, on the face of it, much the same as it was five years ago in
mid-2005, when the Communist University began to plan its first “No
Woman, No Revolution” series.
- Yet two very great gains have been made. The one was the election, in
December 2007 at Polokwane, of an ANC National Executive Committee of
84 members of which 50% are women. The other is the month’s
announcement in 2009 by the SACP GS that the YCLSA has a membership
that is more than 50% female. The last (additional) text in the
series "No Woman, No Revolution" is Meera Nanda's article on the
connection between vulgar nationalism, mystical feminism, obscurantism
and the postmodernist philosophy of degenerate Imperialism, all seen
through the case of India. This will be introduced in a separate and
final post for this series.
Downloads:
Click here to download the text of Umsebenzi Online on Women, 2006-2009
(6340 words, 12 pages)
Additional Text:
Postmodernism, Hindu nationalism, Vedic science, Meera Nanda, 2004


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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 6/09/2010 12:07:00 PM

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