African Revolutionary Writers, Part 2a

Albert Lutuli, 1898 - 1967
Chief Albert Lutuli was President-General of the African National
Congress from 1952 until his death in 1967. In 1960, the year of the
Sharpeville massacre, Lutuli was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Our
sample of his work is his Peace Prize lecture, delivered in Stockholm,
Sweden (download linked below).
This speech fits in well with the theme of the second part of our
course, highlighting the first batch of victories of the African
independence struggles in the period immediately following the
Anti-Fascist World War of 1939-45. In the same year of 1960 alone, 16
African countries achieved independence, so that 1960 is sometimes
called the “Year of Africa”.
In future iterations of this course we would hope to have material from
Paul Robeson and W E B Du Bois in this part, helping us to recall the
worldwide uprising of internationalist political will for the end of
direct colonialism, which was a consequence of the World War.
Lutuli’s speech shows his consciousness of this internationalism, of
which the awarding of his Peace Prize was one expression. His speech
accepting it is not a pacifist speech. It does not condemn armed
struggle, but justifies it. Here are some relevant paragraphs from the
speech:
“This award could not be for me alone, nor for just South Africa, but
for Africa as a whole. Africa presently is most deeply torn with strife
and most bitterly stricken with racial conflict. How strange then it is
that a man of Africa should be here to receive an award given for
service to the cause of peace and brotherhood between men. There has
been little peace in Africa in our time. From the northernmost end of
our continent, where war has raged for seven years, to the centre and
to the south there are battles being fought out, some with arms, some
without. In my own country, in the year 1960, for which this award is
given, there was a state of emergency for many months. At Sharpeville,
a small village, in a single afternoon sixty-nine people were shot dead
and 180 wounded by small arms fire; and in parts like the Transkei, a
state of emergency is still continuing. Ours is a continent in
revolution against oppression. And peace and revolution make uneasy
bedfellows. There can be no peace until the forces of oppression are
overthrown.
“Our continent has been carved up by the great powers; alien
governments have been forced upon the African people by military
conquest and by economic domination; strivings for nationhood and
national dignity have been beaten down by force; traditional economics
and ancient customs have been disrupted, and human skills and energy
have been harnessed for the advantage of our conquerors. In these times
there has been no peace; there could be no brotherhood between men.
“But now, the revolutionary stirrings of our continent are setting the
past aside. Our people everywhere from north to south of the continent
are reclaiming their land, their right to participate in government,
their dignity as men, their nationhood. Thus, in the turmoil of
revolution, the basis for peace and brotherhood in Africa is being
restored by the resurrection of national sovereignty and independence,
of equality and the dignity of man.
“It should not be difficult for you here in Europe to appreciate this.
Your continent passed through a longer series of revolutionary
upheavals, in which your age of feudal backwardness gave way to the new
age of industrialization, true nationhood, democracy, and rising living
standards - the golden age for which men have striven for generations.
Your age of revolution, stretching across all the years from the
eighteenth century to our own, encompassed some of the bloodiest civil
wars in all history. By comparison, the African revolution has swept
across three quarters of the continent in less than a decade; its final
completion is within sight of our own generation…
“Perhaps, by your standards, our surge to revolutionary reforms is
late. If it is so - if we are late in joining the modern age of social
enlightenment, late in gaining self-rule, independence, and democracy,
it is because in the past the pace has not been set by us. Europe set
the pattern for the nineteenth and twentieth-century development of
Africa. Only now is our continent coming into its own and recapturing
its own fate from foreign rule.
“Though I speak of Africa as a single entity, it is divided in many
ways by race, language, history, and custom; by political, economic,
and ethnic frontiers. But in truth, despite these multiple divisions,
Africa has a single common purpose and a single goal - the achievement
of its own independence. All Africa, both lands which have won their
political victories but have still to overcome the legacy of economic
backwardness, and lands like my own whose political battles have still
to be waged to their conclusion - all Africa has this single aim: our
goal is a united Africa in which the standards of life and liberty are
constantly expanding; in which the ancient legacy of illiteracy and
disease is swept aside; in which the dignity of man is rescued from
beneath the heels of colonialism which have trampled it. This goal,
pursued by millions of our people with revolutionary zeal, by means of
books, representations, demonstrations, and in some places armed force
provoked by the adamancy of white rule, carries the only real promise
of peace in Africa. Whatever means have been used, the efforts have
gone to end alien rule and race oppression.”
Please download and read the entire text via this link:Africa and
Freedom, Albert Luthuli, Nobel Peace Prize Lecture, 1960 (6027 words)
Further reading:Selections from the writings of George Padmore (5179
words)


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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 9/11/2010 06:50:00 PM

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