Wow! This is really nice VC. Maybe if we get more of these, we can really 
appreciate where we come from and stop acting like the ANC is some stokvel 
movement ! 

I think we don't appreciate it anymore! 
Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom - let your email find you!

-----Original Message-----
From: VC <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Sun, 08 Apr 2012 08:45:14 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] The first ANC mass-action - The 1919 Anti-Pass
 Campaign: E. S. Reddy


SAHO


*Campaign Against Passes in the Transvaal in 1919*


*E. S. Reddy, South African History Online, 4 March 2012 *

The demonstrations against passes in the Transvaal in 1919 was the first 
mass movement and the first attempt at non-violent resistance organized 
by the ANC. It is of great importance in the history of the ANC, then 
called South African Native National Congress (SANNC), and of the 
liberation struggle, but has received little attention from scholars.

In July 1918, the SANNC Executive Committee passed a resolution calling 
on the Government to abolish the pass laws which shackled African men 
with contract passes. The Transvaal Congress leaders raised the matter 
at meetings with the Prime Minister and other Ministers, but the 
Government took no action.

The Johannesburg branch of the Congress then decided to appeal to the 
African people to throw away their passes and court arrest in order to 
obtain attention to their grievances. They had realised, like Gandhi in 
1906, that appeals and deputations were ineffective without some force 
behind them. Other Witwatersrand branches of the Congress followed the 
example of Johannesburg.

The passive resistance movement began on 30 March 1919 when a mass 
meeting of two thousand Africans in Vrededorp decided to reject the 
passes. The next day, about three thousand Africans demonstrated in 
front of the Johannesburg pass office and left sacks full of passes at 
that office. It was an entirely peaceful demonstration. But police 
charged the crowd with batons and arrested hundreds of people, including 
"constables" appointed by the ANC to keep the demonstration non-violent.

Three leaders of the movement -- Horatio I. Budd Mbelle, W. Dunjwa and 
P.J. Motsoakae -- went to the office of The Star on 1 April to explain 
the movement. According to The Star:

    "Asked why they had resolved on passive resistance, Mbelle said they
    had tried to get redress through making representations from time to
    time for the alleviation of the grievous difficulties under which
    the Natives in the Transvaal laboured, but all their efforts had
    been without avail. Asked what their principal grievances were, the
    deputation stated that apart from many minor difficulties connected
    with the administration of the pass law in the Transvaal, their
    grievances could be grouped under two heads:

        1. The denial of the rights of citizenship.

        2. The denial, through the operation of the colour bar, of the
        rights of ordinary human beings...


    "Asked what their programme was, they said they would insist on
    order being maintained by their people. They had formed a group of
    special constables to collect sticks, and every weapon which any of
    the Natives may be possessed of, and from every platform the Natives
    would be told that there were to be no shouts or threats or anything
    that would incite public feeling. In case of arrest, the Natives
    were told that they must submit quietly, and must go to gaol. No
    picketing had been authorised, and the Natives had simply been
    invited to stop work....

    "'We hold', said Mbelle, 'that the Pass Law is nothing more or less
    than a system of slavery.'...

    "Questioned as to the extent to which they propose to carry the
    movement, the deputation said they simply invited all Natives,
    whether working in stores or in houses to stop work, and invitations
    were also being sent to the Natives working on the mines."^1


More than two hundred Africans were brought to court and charged with 
disturbing the peace or inciting the workers to strike. Crowds of 
Africans outside the court were attacked by mounted police injuring 
thousands of Africans, including women. Mary Benson quotes a letter to 
The Star by Willaim Hosken,^2 an eye witness.

    "Police, mounted and on foot, arrived, to be greeted by hearty
    cheers from the Natives, then some booing, followed by 'absolute
    quiet'. Not a single hostile move was made by the Natives.

    "Then - 'to my astonishment', said Hosken, 'the mounted police
    suddenly spurred their horses and charged on the crowd'. The police
    used their staves vigorously, riding over Natives - who included
    women. Whereupon a civilian began 'slashing with a stick at every
    Native he came near, and finally struck a Native woman a severe
    blow'. Hosken remonstrated and demanded the man's name but was
    ignored. He heard one bystander exclaiming: 'Would I had a
    machine-gun, and I could then do some execution.' As he went along
    the street he came across more whites intercepting Natives."^3


Protests continued in Johannesburg and other towns for several days. 
White vigilantes attacked Congress meetings, some of them shooting at 
the Africans with impunity.About five hundred more Africans were 
arrested and sentenced to fines, imprisonment with hard labour or 
lashes. Nearly all those sentenced to fines chose to go to prison.

The Government appointed a one-man commission to investigate the events 
and it exonerated the police "in view of difficult circumstances".

S.M. Makgatho, in his Presidential Address to the SANNC on 6 May 1919, 
called on the Government to abolish the Transvaal and Free State passes, 
and denounced the violence against the demonstrators in the Transvaal:

    "They (Africans) were driven like cattle, trampled by mounted
    policemen under their horses' hoofs, shot at by white volunteers,
    and some men and women are in their graves as a result of their
    refusal to buy any more passes....

    "Thousands of Natives are suffering imprisonment at the present
    time, and, in spite of the law, many thousands since last month are
    courting arrest by working without any passes."


Referring to the excuse of the authorities that passes help the Natives, 
as they serve to identify the dead and stop crimes, he pointed out:

    "... there were no passes in Johannesburg before 1893, and there was
    less crime proportionately in those days; but since the
    multiplication of passes Johannesburg has been known as the
    University of Crime. Again, like the Cape Natives, who carry no
    passes, white men also die in Johannesburg, and it has never been
    suggested that they, too, should carry identification passes."


He continued:

    "No mention is made of the amount of revenue raised by the
    Government from our people by means of this badge of slavery. The
    Government retains a share of the spoil. The Transvaal Provincial
    Council alone gets £340,000 annually, from the scant earnings of our
    poorly-paid people, to build and maintain schools for white children
    while our educational needs remain unattended."


This passive resistance of 1919, inspired by the success of the 
anti-pass campaign of Free State women and the Indian satyagraha of 
1906-14, could not be sustained and failed to achieve even partial 
success. The pass law for men, unlike the imposition of passes on women 
in the Free State, was integral to the contract labour system. The 
Government, responsive to the interests of the mine owners, did not 
hesitate to crush the men's passive resistance.

While Indian passive resistance had received powerful political and 
financial support from India, as well as some support and understanding 
in Britain and within the white community in South Africa, due to the 
patient efforts of Gandhi over several years, the African resistance 
could not count on such support. Even some African leaders, wedded to 
constitutional agitation, did little to help.

But passive resistance remained in the consciousness of African leaders. 
It was only after the emergence of young leaders prepared for sacrifice 
and the adoption of the Programme of Action in 1949, that the ANC felt 
that the time was ripe for mass passive resistance. The Defiance 
Campaign of 1952 and the anti-pass campaigns of 1960 followed. By then 
some whites in South Africa had allied themselves with the ANC and the 
South African racism was condemned internationally.But the regime was 
able to suppress the resistance, as it was protected by powerful foreign 
interests which denounced apartheid in words but acted otherwise. These 
campaigns, however, became dress rehearsals for the Mass Democratic 
Movement of the 1980s, supported by armed actions and effective 
international solidarity, which secured the end of passes and all other 
crimes against the people.
_____________________________

*_Footnotes_:*

 1. Thomas Karis and Gwendolen M. Carter, From Protest to Challenge: A
    Documentary History of African Politics in South Africa 1882-1964,
    Volume I, pages 106-107.
 2. Mr. Hosken, a liberal politician, had been chairman of a committee
    formed in 1909 of European sympathisers with the Indian passive
    resistance led by Gandhi.
 3. Mary Benson, South Africa: The Struggle for a Birthright
    (International Defence and Aid Fund for Southern Africa, London,
    November 1985), page 40



  * *Mr. E. S. Reddy* is a former Assistant Secretary-General of the
    United Nations in charge of the Centre against Apartheid.



*From: 
http://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/1919_passive_resistance-article4March1972.pdf*
 

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