Zwelinzima Vavi’s letter to Chris Hani on the 19th Anniversary of his Death
Tshonyane!
Didiza!
Chungwa!
Sawa!
Nkomo!
Mthunzi uzimele!
Simke!
Hani!
Mgqunukhwebe!
General Secretary of our vanguard party - SACP
Chief of staff of our glorious army - umkhonto wesizwe
Leading member of our people's movement - ANC
 
It was on this day 19 years ago, that you were brutally gunned down outside 
your home in Dawn Park.

Your death continues to strike a very sensitive chord amongst the working 
people of this country, who saw in you their liberator and a general who was 
committed to leading them to their own version of a land of milk and honey.
Your death marked an immeasurable loss sustained not only by the poor in this 
unequal land called South Africa, but to many others across the world, who came 
to appreciate your role and immense contribution in one of the most dramatic 
events of the 20th century – the fall of apartheid.

It was on this day that you took your last leap and met your untimely death at 
the hands of those who hated peace and enjoyed an enduring affair with 
counter-revolution and anti-communism.

One of the deepest scars on the visage of our democracy is the reality that a 
soldier like you, who toiled and laboured to ensure that the people’s thirst 
for equality and justice is quenched, had his life brutally taken away at such 
a defining moment of our struggle against apartheid and capitalism.

Although your assassination sent shockwaves across the world and paralysed many 
of those who saw in you a true representative of mass power, we have come to 
appreciate that as a revolutionary who fully understood the deep hatred 
possessed by those who have an immortal hatred for communism and its principles 
of equality and justice, you had made peace with the fact that there are only 
two results in a revolution: death or victory.

Your life continues to inspire new generations of South Africans, a glittering 
example of a courageous revolutionary leader of his people, personifying the 
noblest principles and finest traditions of our liberation and socialist 
movement - selflessness as against self centeredness, collective leadership as 
against personality cult, solidarity as against survival of the fittest, 
sacrifice for common good as against greed and individualism.

All of us, particularly those of us who speak in the name of the working class, 
are duty bound to learn from what you taught us so well and strive to emulate 
your record of service to the people.

You departed at perhaps one of the most difficult moments of our struggle 
against apartheid when the enemy camp in the form of the apartheid regime and 
all its supporters was waging an onslaught on our people and making several 
disastrous changes to the economy.

The widespread privatization, which has robbed many poor people of their 
hard-won citizenship rights in a democratic South Africa – was a trend the 
white minority regime initiated in its last days.

At the same time, the regime also launched a massive offensive against our 
people and made use of force and death squads, in collaboration with the IFP, 
to force our people into surrender and submission.

The Boipatong massacre, whose 20th anniversary we will be commemorating in June 
this year, is one of the most painful chapters in our history where our people 
were stabbed, maimed and butchered by the enemy camp as part of its dirty 
tricks.

We remain convinced that your assassination was part of this greater plot to 
cajole our people and its movement into capitulation. Your brutal assassination 
led to the death of your father in our struggle O.R. Tambo who could not 
stomach the images of your body and blood on television. Your own biological 
parents soon departed. No parent would like to see his own offspring in a pool 
of blood on national television.

Tshonyane, we are certain that you will find comfort in the knowledge that the 
working class in this country is still a fighting class, forever engaged in a 
battle to reclaim the means of production and ultimately free humanity from the 
burdens of capitalism.

The working class in South Africa today remains as militant as it was when you 
departed from the land of the living.

A simple glance at the COSATU organised march against labour brokers and 
e-tolling would tell you that the working class remains as radical as it was 
when if fought the apartheid’s regime’s introduction of a Value Added Tax (VAT) 
on basic foodstuffs, healthcare and essential services.

We speak without fear of contradiction when we say that the massive show of 
strength by the people against labour brokers and the privatisation of the 
roads was a clear referendum against the stranglehold that capitalists have 
over our country and our economy.

It was a clear message and reminder to the government of the Freedom Charter 
principle that no government shall assert its authority on the people without 
their consent.

I am certain that you were watching with pride and envy as thousands of the 
poor rallied behind COSATU’s call for the banning of labour brokers and the 
cancellation of the e-tolling system.

We have no doubt that were you alive today, you would have formed part of the 
picket line calling for the banning of labour brokers and an end to the 
privatisation of our roads.

There is no doubt in our hearts that you would be impressed by the strides that 
the ANC has made in the transformation of the lives of many South Africans. We 
have one of the world`s most democratic constitutions, a bill of rights, and a 
constitutional court which checks that the laws and courts comply with that 
Constitution.

Over 2.5 million houses have been built for the poor, giving shelter to over 
ten million people. 6 million households have gained access to clean water 
since 1994 and electricity has been connected to nearly 5 million homes. In 
1994, only 62% of households had access to clean drinking water - today 93% do.
Today 77% of the households have access to decent sanitation and 84% have 
access to electricity. By 2010, 14.5 million people were receiving social 
grants. Tshonyane you would be very impressed by this progress registered in 17 
short years.
 
Despite these great achievements however, some the struggle remains an uphill 
climb and only the working class is capable of leading us out of the web.
As we commemorate the 19th anniversary of your assassination, the capitalist 
class across the world continues to mount unprecedented attacks on the living 
standards of the working class and the poor.

Tshonyane, many of us, the working poor, are still super exploited and continue 
to labour for a pittance in the factories and the farms that give our bosses 
millions and millions in profits. 

Approximately 35% of adult men and women are rendered idle by unemployment.  
Most worrying is that 72% of these are young people between 15-36 years of age 
and 60% have less than secondary education. 
There remains a stark racial element to unemployment. A 2002 study found that 
despite similar qualifications, whites are on average 30% more likely to be 
employed than Africans. 

It is this high unemployment that condemns many of us to a life of indignity. 
This unemployment has turned many healthy workers into beggars, who have to 
knock on relatives’ doors for their next meal.

The struggle for jobs is still intricately linked to the challenge to build a 
more equitable and just society. South Africa’s wage gap is one of the highest 
in the world, and is still growing.

Shoprite CEO Whitey Basson in 2010 took home the highest-ever monthly earnings 
ever recorded in a single year – an unbelievable R627.53 million in salary, 
perks and share options. All this whilst workers in the same company earn 
between a minimum of R1800 and R4000 depending on whether you are labour broker 
employed or so called permanent worker!
The brazen exploitation of the masses of the people by the mine owners, the 
land barons and farmers as well as the greedy retail giants in this country 
remind us of the reasons why we find it so hard to forget you.

>From the mines of Rustenburg and Kimberley to the clothing factories of Durban 
>and Cape Town, the militant working class remembers and misses you dearly.

Just like unemployment, inequality is also racialised. While black South 
Africans` salaries increased by 38% between 1995 and 2008, the incomes of white 
South Africans rose by 83.5%!

The warning you issued just a few years before your death that failure to 
properly address the HIV and AIDS would “result in untold damage and suffering 
by the end of the century” was precise.
Your children, those for whom you crossed borders and lay your head in distant 
lands, continue to die of HIV and AIDS.

Although government has managed to make antiretroviral treatment available to 
over a million people, the rate of infection is still far too high.

We know that you would be furious to learn that while South Africa has less 
than 1% of the world’s population, it still has 17% of people living with 
HIV/Aids, the highest incidence in the world. And that life expectancy rates 
are falling and now stand at 56 for women and 51 for men. The death rate has 
doubled in nine years!

We remain convinced that if that bullet did not end your life so early and in 
such crucial time South Africa would have not lost 10 years to HIV and AIDS 
denialism during which 350 000 people died including many leading cadres of 
your movement.

These grim statistics are part of the broader battle between the two main 
contending classes in South Africa and indeed the world. It is a battle that we 
intend to win!

The legacy of apartheid is seen by simply looking at the festering sore of 
underdevelopment and poverty that plagues the former Bantustans. The poor 
education system that children in townships and rural areas are subjected to is 
a constant reminder of the damage that apartheid inflicted on the working class.

I had an opportunity to drive frequently in the former Transkei Bantustan 
recently. Whilst it is clear that strides have been made to improve the lives 
of our people there is no doubt that it still resembles a labour reserve area 
that the apartheid regime designed.

We know that you would have greatly disapproved of the spate of careerism 
plaguing the movement today.

This we know because throughout the years that you served the movement, modesty 
is one of the character traits you are revered for.

When many were angling for the corridors of power in a new democratic South 
Africa, you, the people’s commissar, chose instead to continue in service of 
the working class as the General Secretary of the party of socialism – the 
South African Communist Party.

Responding to some who expressed shock at this decision you courageously 
retorted:
“The perks of a new government are not really appealing to me. Everybody would 
like to have a good job, a good salary…..but for me that is not the be-all of 
struggle. What is important is the continuation of the struggle… the real 
problems of the country are not whether one is in Cabinet …but what we do for 
social upliftment of the working masses of our country.”

If only there were more cadres like you today! If only the revolution could 
continue to produce cadres defined by selflessness as opposed to egocentrism 
and the desire to serve the people as opposed to using the movement as a step 
ladder to their careers!

In these trying times when the people’s movement is at war with itself – where 
labelling and innuendos, careerism and opportunism, patronage, selective 
justice, cherry-picking on corruption and the criminalisation of dissent, leaks 
and character assassinations, pigeonholing and casting aspersions are all at 
their peak – we remember that you too were once subjected to unspeakable 
treatment from those who could not withstand the truth contained in what we 
today call the Hani memorandum.

As a fierce democrat in your own right, we are certain that rather than 
throwing foul-smelling labels at fellow comrades merely because they share 
different views about the tempo and direction of our struggle, you would 
instead encourage widespread debate and discussion.

We know this because history teaches us that Hani the commander was an ardent 
believer in the notion of the battle of ideas and like many communists of 
similar calibre, believed that a healthy political environment requires that “a 
hundred flowers bloom and a hundred schools of thought contend”.

We know through your own example that you would have encouraged young people to 
continue to be militant and be intolerant of their today's economic 
circumstances of unemployment and a faltering education system that 
marginalises millions, labour brokering, etc. you would have insisted on 
discipline and respect for older comrades. 

We know you would not have allowed the type of ill-discipline we saw and chose 
to conveniently ignore because it was directed at others we disagreed with. 
That standing on a chair and shouting down older comrades would have not 
happened of you were around. You would have been amongst those who insisted at 
the ANC NGC the ill-discipline must end.

You would be in the forefront of efforts to renew our movement and challenge 
the new cultures that threaten the very existence of our glorious movement. We 
know you would mobilize the masses of the people to battle against the self 
enrichment programmes currently underway.

You would have been in the opposite of the new class if tenderpreneurs.
You would have confronted blossoming factionalism that is tearing our movement 
apart.

You would have condemned mediocrity these factions impose on our people and we 
know you would have decried the roll-overs that rob the poor the services they 
are yearning for.

You would not have tolerated those failing to spend infrastructure budgets just 
because they are in a faction you support.

The struggle against social injustice, poverty and deprivation can only be won 
through mass mobilisation and a united front, dedicated to putting an end to 
the capitalist honeymoon that we have been experiencing since 1994.

You were the most ardent spokesperson of the poor and the most unapologetic 
commander of the oppressed, who defined his destiny as synonymous with the 
destiny of the working class of this country.

For this reason, you were simultaneously the best friend of the working class 
and enemy number one of the capitalist class which continues to steal the 
wealth created by those who till the soil with the sickle in the farms and 
operate the grinding machines in the factories.

Your deeds and principles will forever inspire us to advance the struggle 
against capitalism, and imperialism to the highest levels.

Commander, teacher, comrade, leader, revolutionary and martyr, the working 
class in this beautiful country wishes to assure you that we will continue to 
train new soldiers who are willing and able to give battle to the twin enemies 
of the people – capitalism and its higher stage which is imperialism.
 
We miss you Tshonyane

Comradely yours

Zwelinzima Vavi


Sent from my iPad

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