YCLSA Statement on the 122nd Anniversary of May Day as Declared by the
Socialist International Congress in 1889.

The Young Communist League of South Africa (uFasimba) wishes to join
all the left and worker organisations in celebration of the Workers’
Day alternatively known as May Day.

A historical glance

The first of May symbolises the historical dedication of revolutionary
workers’ unions in Chicago under the leadership of the Federation of
Organised Trades and Labour Unions which passed a resolution that
declared eight hours as a legal day’s work from and after the 1st May
1886. Despite resistance from the government of the United States of
America, Canada and South Africa, by April 1886, 250,000 workers were
involved in the May Day Movement. It was only in 1889 that the Second
International Socialist Congress resolved on the designation of the
May 1 as a workers day under the leadership of Wilhelm Liebknecht, the
founder on one of the founders of German social democracy.

But what are the significant factors of May Day at this current
conjecture and in the
South African political context.

The fact that this day came into being as the result of workers’
victorious struggles against supper exploitation by business leaders
of the time does not mean that such a victory was an end in itself. It
was just the beginning, the beginning of the working class struggle
against capitalist exploitation which persistently continued beyond
this eight hour victory. Today, capitalists continue to exploit the
labour of the working class whose labour is divided into two aspects,
namely, necessary labour and surplus labour. In this regard the aspect
of necessary labour constitutes the wages of the working class with
the other aspect, surplus labour, constituting the profit of the
capitalist within the same period of what is called a working day. In
essence, this demonstrates that the struggle for the emancipation of
the working class from exploitation by the capitalists remains
important as ever. This reality calls upon all serious revolutionaries
from all walks of life to take it upon themselves in making the class
struggle a struggle above all struggles at a strategic level. The
everyday labour of the working class which continues to produce huge
profits towards the idle capitalists should serve as a principal
source of conviction in advancing the struggle for socialism. For if
it was not for the African cheap labour exploited for centuries by
European mining conglomerates, South Africa would been bare of the
bridges and roads, of big hotels, the railway lines, malls and all
other forms of infrastructural landscapes including schools and
universities. If today we are to look back and draw our memory towards
these centuries we would be embraced by a mammoth irony: that the
bridges that we built, the big hotels, railway lines, harbors, malls
and things bear no significance or solution to the life of squalor
that the poor of this country face.

Unity in the alliance is our weapon.

As we join COSATU in celebration of this august Workers’ Day we must
continue to elevate the class content of our National Democratic
Revolution not only in the ANC but even within the trade union
movement under the leadership and guidance of the South African
Communist Party as the vanguard of the working class. It is our duty
as YCLSA to do not only reaffirm our position as a Marxist school of
young workers and the youth in general but also to ensure that the
struggle to build socialism is made fashionable, in all areas of human
existence. It is our duty as YCLSA to preserve unity within and
between the SACP and COSATU for if we do not do so, our detractors
will seize the moment and torment this relationship for their own
interests and at the expense of the working class. We strongly believe
that the relationship between these two organisations is the only
asset and arsenal of the workers and the poor of this country and
beyond. It is a relationship that is of fundamental importance in our
struggle for socialism in our country. It is a relationship, we must
not take for granted but continuously and consciously cultivate. A
relationship based on taking up common struggles on the ground. It is
a relationship, within the context of our broader alliance that has
made an enormous impact in the direction of the country is taking
today.  It is a relationship for the future of our country, and for
the workers and the poor of our land.
As we celebrate May Day this year, we must be able to connect with
political developments and realities faced by the South African
working class. Given the fact that South Africa remains purely a
capitalist state after 17 years of democracy with business having
hugely benefited throughout these years, it is time we realise that
the case for socialism continues to be relevant even more than before.
We must dispel those who, like sewer-pipe revolutionaries, continue to
sow divisions in the alliance by supporting and creating factional
allies within our structures for purposes of derailing our course to
build socialism. To those who proclaim to be part of us yet they are
not ready to advance and defend our programs as YCLSA and SACP, we
must precisely subject their actions to the whims of our
organisational principles.

The irony of capitalism is unfashionable.

All noble and able men and women, young and old across racial lines,
the working class in a nutshell should intensify the fight against the
irony of capitalism; it is an irony that all must be prepared to
fearlessly smash. It is an irony that cannot be dissuaded by
‘Safety-First’ revolutionaries. Capitalism is an irony to the
capitalists themselves. It is an irony that breeds hunger to hundreds
of millions and wealth and the riches to the few. Bu it is an irony
that can only be defeated by those who are its integral part, the
working class. It is an irony that only socialism will exterminate.
Let it be said that as we were able to defeat the political hegemonic
confluence of the apartheid regime, what on earth will impede us from
abolishing this irony, the irony of capitalism.

Issued by the National office

Contact

Mafika Mndebele

National Spokesperson (073 574 5953)

-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

Reply via email to