Congratulations to SADTU

 

 

By Comrade Phatse Justice Piitso

 

I was amongst the most fortunate to be counted in the delegation of the
South African Communist Party which attended the recent national congress of
the South African democratic Teachers Union (SADTU). From the deep bottom of
my heart I convey my appreciation to the leadership of the party for
affording me the opportunity to attend this most historic supreme gathering
of the union. 

 

The congress was one of the greatest milestones in the history of the union.
It will forever decorate the beautiful chapters of our history books.

 

What distinguishes it from others is that it took place against the
background of events of great historical significance in our country and the
whole world. Events that define the shape of the annals of our history in
the making. 

 

First and foremost the congress took place three years before the Centenary
anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution that took place in
Russia, 1917. An earthmoving event that shook the foundations of the world
capitalist empire. 

 

Secondly it took place a year before our country and the people celebrate
the 60 year anniversary of the adoption of the Freedom Charter. A document
that has become the guiding tool of our struggle for the total liberation of
our people.

 

Thirdly the congress took place twenty four years after the collapse of the
Soviet Union and the eastern bloc of socialism. The most painful event that
has weakened the world progressive movement.

 

Fourthly it took place at the time when the people of our country are
celebrating 20 years of the achievements of our democratic dispensation. A
period that ushered the end and the beginning of our new forms of protracted
struggle for the socio-economic transformation of our society. 

 

Lastly the congress took place against the background of counter
revolutionary momentum that seeks to divide our labour federation and our
revolutionary alliance led by our national liberation movement. The aim is
to undermine the achievements of our National Democratic Revolution. 

 

These forces of counter-revolution are opposed to the guiding principles of
the Communist Manifesto. 

 

"Communist do not form a separate party opposed to the other working class
parties. They have no interests separate and apart from those of the
proletariat as a whole. They do not set sectarian principles of their own,
by which to shape and to mould the proletariat movement." 

 

Delegates to the congress understood that their highest duty is to defend
the unity and cohesion of our revolution. They attended the congress knowing
well that the task is to triumph over the adversaries of our NDR. 

 

The tumultuous mood of unity reverberating at the congress brought back the
memories of my early years as one of the generation of the founding fathers
of the union. I joined the ranks of the union at the embryonic stage of its
formation immediately after completing my Secondary Teachers Diploma at
Sekhukhune College of Education in the year 1990.

 

The overwhelming revolutionary mood reverberating through the roof of the
presidium, reminded me of the philosophical words of courage from the leader
of the world Communist Movement Comrade Vladimir Lenin when he said.

 

"In carrying its revolutionary tasks, the proletariat is able to draw its
own national traditions of struggles, the traditions of its own songs,
slogans, symbols and heroes. It fulfilling its leading role the proletariat
is able to rally its allies to the bottom of the common cause of its
struggle". 

 

The congress was itself a demonstration of the fundamental principle of
unity and cohesion. The guiding principle of one union one industry, total
workers control and the building of a strong shop floor structures. 

 

I can confirm that the union I belonged to, the union that has traversed the
most glorious and heroic path of our struggle, is still rooted in the rich
traditions and culture of our liberation movement. The traditions and
culture that have become synonymous to the struggle of the people of our
country.

 

The congress reaffirmed the historic role and centrality of our liberation
movement as the premier leader of our common struggle to build a better
society. A historic role that premised the demise of one of the most brutal
pariah states in the history of mankind. 

 

The basis of discussions from plenary was informed by the principle of
constructive criticism and self-criticism. Delegates understood well that
contradictions make us grow and develop. 

 

There was a conducive atmosphere for a sober, robust and fearless debate,
and a determination to give way for a comprehensive appraisal of the
weaknesses, strengths, and the programme of action of the union into the
future.

 

Congress understood well the most complex political question that unity and
cohesion is the cardinal principle of our revolution. That the unity of our
revolutionary forces is a guarantee for the success of our National
Democratic Revolution. 

 

This was a platform to confirm that the general membership of the union
comprehends the tasks of our second phase of our transition for a radical
socio-economic transformation of our society, with the ANC affirmed as the
leader of our struggle for the construction of our national democratic
society. Importantly the congress corresponded well with the conception that
the working class is the backbone of our transition to build a non-racial,
non-sexist, democratic and prosperous society.

 

During the Congress of the Second International Comrade Vladimir Lenin again
had to say the following about the role of a trade union movement in the
struggle of the working class.

 

"Both the political and economic struggle of the working class are equally
necessary for the complete liberation of the proletariat from the shackles
of ideological, political and economic servitude. Whilst the parties of
social democracy fail to organise and to lead the political struggle of the
proletariat, so it is the task of the union organisation to coordinate and
lead the economic struggle of the working class". 

 

To this end it is important that the South African working class understands
the class character of the ANC as a revolutionary national liberation
movement. That it grapples well with the most important theoretical
formulation of the relationship between the national, class and gender
struggle. 

 

Our national liberation movement is not just a nationalist movement which
its focus is the colours of our national flag, national anthem, different
ethnic and race groups,  borders and the names of the oceans, rivers,
mountains, valleys and neighbours surrounding our democratic republic. Our
movement is a revolutionary national liberation movement. 

 

The ANC is part of the worldwide struggle of the people of the world to
liberate themselves from the yoke of imperialism and neo-colonialism. Our
movement is part of the revolutionary contingent to liberate the world from
the legacy of poverty, disease and underdevelopment.

 

In 1928, the plenary session of Communist International characterised the
South Africa then as a British dominion of a special type. The character of
the South African economy was such that British imperialism carried the
economic exploitation of our country with the participation of the white
South African bourgeoisie. The Communist International called for the
establishment of native South African republic as a stage towards a worker
or a peasant republic with full equal rights for all races. It formulated
the theoretical preposition that the oppressed people of our country do not
only suffer from capitalist exploitation and imperialist domination, but
also from racial discrimination. A theoretical synthesis that constitutes
the core of the essence of our national democratic revolution. 

 

Our union SADTU has an immediate task to lead in its space the political and
socio-economic struggle of the working class during this important period of
the second phase of our transition for the construction of our national
democratic society. The foremost task is the consolidation of the common
cause of our National Democratic Revolution. 

 

Therefore our struggles against opportunism and counter-revolution is
inseparable from the revolutionary struggles of the working class. Without a
protracted and resolute struggle against all these counter-revolutionary
tendencies there will be no victory of the working class struggle.

 

 

Phatse Justice Piitso is the former Ambassador to the republic of Cuba and
former Provincial Secretary of the SACP in Limpopo, and writes his personal
capacity

 

 

From: http://www.sacp.org.za/main.php?ID=4535#three

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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