From the book: Book 5: People, Places and Apartheid commissioned by The Department of Education
Anti-dangerous work. This organisation happened in the context of people living in their racial or cultural ghettos, with their own experiences, histories and issues to be confronted. This chapter describes some of the successes and difficulties faced by political activists working in the colouredcommunities of Cape Town. While many communities in the Western Cape were highly politicised during the 1980s, a central issue faced by activists was expressed as follows:
I think that has been a hell of a sore point in the coloured community, where people explain their lack of participation, or their apathy, by saying, ‘We don’t actually have a history of feeling confident that people stand together in the coloured areas’.
Note:All oral history quotations in this chapter are from interviews the author conducted in 1988 with activists in various coloured communities in Cape Town. These quotations were originally used in his MA thesis (see Select Bibliography).
“Coloured”is a loaded term in South Africa. While it is a colonial and apartheid creation, it is nevertheless a term that is widely used. For this reason, and because of the focus of this chapter on organisation during the 1980s, I use the term, and without the clumsy quotation marks.
For contemporary debates on coloured identity, see Zimitri Erasmus, Coloured by History, Shaped by Place. Cape Town, Kwela, 2001.
This chapter explores these issues through the words of United Democratic Front (UDF) activists. It describes the context of political struggles — beginning with the school boycotts of the early 1980s, consumer boycotts and stayaways which reached a climax in 1985. In addition, this chapter argues that it was inappropriate to label the political consciousness of coloured communities in the 1980s as “apathy” or “false consciousness”. The reasons for people’s conservatism or unresponsiveness to political campaigns were far more complex.
What contributed to the building of people’s organisations in Cape Town from 1980 to 1984?
The 1976 Soweto student uprising was a significant act of political defiance against the apartheid state. In the Western Cape, the Soweto uprising triggered student revolts in two Cape Town communities, Bonteheuwel and Langa. These student activists were mainly black consciousness (BC) in ideological orientation. The organisations they forged — such as the Black People’s Convention (BPC) — were short-lived and crushed by state repression by 1977. In contrast, the 1980 school boycotts in the Western Cape were a more important turning point in the building of sustainable antiapartheid organisations in schools and communities. They also marked the beginning of the re-emergence of organisations aligned with the African National Congress (ANC), also known as “the Charterist Movement”, inside South Africa.
“You must remember the Committee of 81. They brought out a manifesto, which was very radical because they defined issues in class terms. They defined the question of race in a different way, not like the Unity Movement who almost denied the existence of ethnic differences. So out of the BC position developed a new kind of thinking among student activists. In 1981, at the funeral of Hennie Ferris, for the first time publicly [since the early 1960s — SF] a Charteristbanner was raised in the Western Cape. Ferris was a community leader who was on the Islandand when he died people felt he should be remembered for what he stood for. And immediately after that, the anti-Republic festivals campaigns happened. As a force that’s where it started, and it just encompassed a range of all these 1980 graduates into the fold.”
“1981 was significant in the sense that for the first time organisations, or people’s organisations, became a reality in the Western Cape area. And they were fairly mass-based in the sense that issues were identified that people could relate to. Issues were clearly worked out. The maintenance campaign, the rents campaign, buying our houses….”
Due to the 1980 school boycotts, the need to build not only student organisations in schools, but also community structures in order to politically mobilise people more broadly became evident to activists. In April 1980 the Cape Areas Housing Action Committee (CAHAC) was launched. This stimulated the growth of civic and residents’ organisations in coloured and African areas across the Western Cape.
It also spurred the development of youth structures outside of schools and universities. The Cape Youth Congress (CAYCO) was launched in July 1983. Together with the Congress of South African Students (COSAS), which organised in schools, CAYCO was possibly the most militant organisation in the region. Later, in 1985, these organisations were at the forefront of battles with the police and army.
The 1980-1984 period was an intense time for the recruitment, training and building of community organisations. It also triggered heated debates among the various political tendencies of the Western Cape. The New Unity Movement, the Western Cape Action League, black consciousness groups and the Charterist Movement debated questions such as who should be included in people’s organisations, the nature of working-class leadership and, most crucially, the strategy and tactics of political mobilisation.
By August 1983, with the national launch of the United Democratic Front in Mitchells Plein, the Charterist organisations were becoming stronger in terms of numbers and organisational capacity.
The UDF was a broad front of organisations that included youth, student, women’s, civics and other political organisations under its banner. Under the watchful eyes of the apartheid government, the UDF denied that it was a front for the ANC in exile. In reality, however, that is what it amounted to.
There were more people classified “coloured” living in Cape Town than in the rest of the country put together.
The UDF put forward a non-racial strategy of developing alliances across the partheid-defined communities of African, coloured, Asian and white people.
The first major campaign of the UDF was against the Tricameral Parliament elections of 1984. This was particularly significant in the Western Cape, given the number of potential coloured voters that resided in the region. On the whole, the boycott strategy of the UDF succeeded in ensuring that only small numbers of people actually voted.
It is probable that the vast majority of people classified coloured were opposed to the Tricameral Parliament, but did this necessarily mean that they supported the anti-apartheid liberation movement? Beneath the public rhetoric of leadership figures, on-the-ground activists debated and thought through these complex issues.
In established working-class areas, people were very aware of the problems they faced, especially socio-economic problems — wages, working conditions, employment, housing, electricity, water, the condition of streets and much more. Finding ways of drawing links in people’s minds between their socio-economic problems and the broader political context was not only a source of debate in community organisations, but also for the emerging anti-apartheid or independent trade union movement.
From 1979 black African workers could again legally organise themselves into trade unions, but these worker rights were still severely limited under apartheid labour laws. For example, it was very difficult to have a legal strike and it was illegal to engage in stayaways. With the success of the November 1984 stayaways in the Transvaal, worker stayaways became a common strategy to challenge both the apartheid state and private companies, by building alliances between trade union and community organisations across the country. However, this strategy was less successful in the Western Cape, for reasons that will be discussed later.
In the 1979-1984 period, several consumer boycotts were organised to help striking workers. This community strategy helped to support trade unions and simultaneously put pressure on specific private companies. For example, there was the Fattis and Monis boycott organised by the Food and Canning Workers Union (FCWU), the Rowntree boycott organised by the South African Allied Workers Union (SAAWU), the red meat boycott organised by the General Workers Union (GWU) and the Grand Bazaars boycottorganised by the Retail and Allied Workers Union (RAWU).
By late 1984 community organisations, especially those under the banner of the UDF, were challenging the apartheid state through various campaigns, widespread publicity and effective mobilisation. But this was all a build-up to the intensive clashes of the following year.
Charterist — refers to the Freedom Charter, adopted in 1955. At the time, it was the guiding political document for the ANC and allied organisations.
Island— used like this the word refers to Robben Island, where many political prisoners were sent to serve out their sentences
How was the apartheid state made ungovernable in 1985?
1985 was an important year in the political history of South Africa. Across the country anti-apartheid organisations confronted the police, army and government officials. It was the year that people’s organisations deliberately aimed to make the apartheid state ungovernable. Protest marches, boycotts, stayaways and strikes disrupted state structures in thousands of communities and schools. For weeks, or even months in some communities, the state was no longer in control of local governance.
However, by the end of the year the apartheid state had begun to regain control through detentions, beatings, shootings, assassinations and the implementation of unlimited powers granted to the state under repeated States of Emergency.
Cape Town was one of the many cities which witnessed on-going clashes, especially street battles between students and youth on the one hand and the police and army on the other. While the police and army used Casspirs, tear gas and guns filled with buckshot, birdshot, rubber bullets or live ammunition, protesters used stones and in some cases home-made
petrol bombs.
Four of the most persistent flashpoints in Cape Town were Athlone in the vicinity of Belgravia and Thornton Roads, Bonteheuwel in the Vanguard Drive area, Guguletu in the vicinity of NY1, and Mitchells Plein in the Spine Road area. The University of the Western Cape (UWC) was the most militant site of university struggles. Many student-police clashes took place on the campus and on Modderdam Road. There were also many other sites of struggle.
People of all ages and across the cultural spectrum participated in these struggles. However, students and youth from the coloured and African areas of Cape Town constituted the vast majority. These “young lions and lionesses” (as they were described at the time) took the biggest risks and often suffered the worst consequences. Images and stories of these handto- hand street battles were communicated through the global mass media.
This directly stimulated the emergence of a disinvestmentand sanctionscampaign in various countries. The countrywide State of Emergency resulted in the systematic detention or banning of the student, youth and community leadership. By 1986 anti-apartheid organisations were on the defensive. In the period 1987-1989, as organisations found ways to regroup, discussions were taking place about the nature of organisation in this repressive period.
The relationship between the militant young activists who emerged out of the 1980 school boycotts and the older generation was a significant dynamic. This dynamicdirectly influenced the difficulties of conscientising, organising and mobilising people for the anti-apartheid cause in the coloured communities of Cape Town.
boycott— to withdraw from commercial or social relations, as a punishment or protest; to refuse to buy or handle goods for this reason Origin: from the name of Captain Charles C. Boycott, an Irish land agent so treated in 1880 in an attempt to get rents reduced
Casspir— a type of armoured truck often used by the police
disinvestment— reducing or withdrawing investments (usually an action taken by a company or organisation)
sanctions— measures taken by a state to coerce another state to conform to an international agreement or norms of conduct
dynamic— (as used here) an energising or motive force
conscientise— to develop a person’s consciousness of their rights, especially in order to free themselves from oppression
“But I think the conservatism is that we don’t have any experience of politics in the coloured community. Also, don’t rock the boat, rather dissociate yourself from politics. If you do want to go into politics rather join the Labour Party because that has some kind of credibility. We also found that out with the anti-election campaign.
“Maybe it’s not conservatism, maybe it’s a question of fear. People engage in struggle once they have realised their own power. So people understand that things are bad and it’s wrong and they’re obviously anti-apartheid; in that sense they do have a political consciousness. But whether they see themselves doing something about it, is the next thing. And they don’t and they reject talk about it; they reject bringing it in, using symbols and slogans because they don’t see the possibility of participating in change. It is only in particular periods when they do realise their ability to change events. And it is in periods of action, of a strike, of a community struggle, then they realise their ability to change.”
What was the nature of political consciousness in the coloured communities of the Western Cape?
Colonial, pre-apartheid and apartheid governments lumped a wide range of cultural groups under the broad label, coloured. This historical reality had direct consequences for anti-apartheid political organisation in the areas defined as “coloured” under the Group Areas Act of 1950. The years of life under apartheid had their consequences — many people felt they were inferior.
But African communities also endured years of indoctrination under apartheid, so what was different for the coloured communities in Cape Town? Several activists referred to the benefits that the coloured community received from the apartheid system. This included the Coloured Labour Preference Policy, which began in 1955 and certainly helped many coloured families to achieve a greater sense of economic security.
More alienating, though, was the way that the apartheid state saw coloured communities as cultural “leftovers” — the people who did not fit into “real” ethnic or racial classifications. This often carried the sense that people classified coloured had neither an identity nor a history. These are apartheid myths that have no basis in historical fact. However, they are myths that people believed and that negatively shaped how they perceived themselves as individuals and as a community.
A leading activist from the Athlone area said:
“Even in the height of 1985, during a parent-teachers meeting, they wouldn’t once mention the politics of the class boycotts of 1985. But the parents were coming there because their kids were involved in having to make decisions about going on class boycotts or not. The parents are discussing it at the supper table, working-class or middle-class parents. It’s amazing, the contradiction. They would talk about it in the taxis, they would talk about it in the trains, but it’s not defined as politics. Politics is defined as something separate.”
Put in different words, another activist said:
“People have this vague notion of community organisation being political, but they don’t perceive it in terms of their problems and how that is political. They know that we political activists are dabbling in politics but when they come to us to discuss their evictions they don’t see how those people are actually involved in politics, how that issue of theirs, the eviction, is political. Their sense of their predicament is not to do with certain political contradictions.”
The Western Cape was declared by the government as a coloured labour preference area. This involved the removal of Africans
to what the government considered to be their “ancestral homelands” in the Eastern Cape. The coloured workers who were left would have a better chance of getting work.
The cultural diversity of people classified as coloured by the apartheid state needs to be more deeply understood. It did have a bearing on the levels of anti-apartheid militancy in parts of those communities. Activists repeatedly referred to a “culture of individualism” as an obstacle to building collective organisations. However, this does not explain why coloured youth showed considerable common purpose, to stand together and work together with youth from the African townships. law of the land, the yardstick by which all other laws are judged.
Let us then rather turn our attention to the older generations within the coloured community. Many of them saw that there were problems in their communities and facing their children, but they were very reluctant to talk about these problems in political
forums.
While it was evident that the political and socioeconomic aspects of the apartheid system were having harsh consequences in people’s lives, especially in working-class areas, why were these issues not perceived as being political?
Most working class people were understandably caught-up in day-today economic struggles, which activists at the time described as “bread and butter issues”. Viewed from within this context, explicitly political issues such as releasing political prisoners and detention without trial seemed less important than the pressing concerns of their everyday lives. It is also important to acknowledge the mixture of fear, uncertainty and even racism that shaped political consciousness in coloured communities.
“We had a naïve idea that the mass public space that emerged in the post-1980 period would sort of last ad infinitum, and that was the big mistake we made. Not that we did not expect repression, but we always thought repression would be, in a sense, short-term. We never realised that we could go into a period where there would be a permanent State of Emergency. The second thing about the period, we had to understand that we had to work at very different levels in building the MDM [Mass Democratic Movement].
We did not build the underbelly properly.
“The other problem with that period, it was a period of mainly very young people, or youth who had emerged and were fired-up politically. Obviously there was a need for all those organisational structures but I don’t think that we were able to capture the older people in a way that more senior people would have been able to do. I think that was to some extent a limitation.”
By “very different levels” this activist means both “above ground” and “underground” organisational work. ‘‘Underground” did not mean the illegal or semi-legal organising of public organisations. Rather it refers to the network of “cell structures”, which would include ANC political-military operatives working together with UDF activists.
“I think the apartheid system has done its dirty work indoctrinating people, making people feel because they’re coloured they are inferior. It has been years and it’s going to take people a long time to get rid of the brunt of apartheid.”
Given these concerns that activists were already identifying in the mid to late 1980s, it is not surprising that the majority of coloured communities in Cape Town, especially in working-class areas, voted for the National Party in the first democratic elections in 1994. By the late 1980s many activists realised that “apathy” was not the best way to describe a complex generational situation. The youth in most coloured communities had been politicised by the events of 1980-1985. However, their parents and grandparents had generally been uninvolved in those events; they tended to remember the pre-apartheid and apartheid experiences of their formative years.
Equally, given that some sections of the coloured community did not conform to the theories espoused by the liberation movements, does not mean that the community was “the problem”. Some activists felt that the problem was with themselves. One of the principles of Charterist approaches to political organisation is to always start organisational work “at where your community is at” and not where you would like people to go or be. The activist quoted in the box is implying that all too often activists in coloured areas forgot this basic principle.
“Will you be interested in an overly political issue when you don’t have bread in your house? It’s more that kind of thing, their day-to-day needs, their personal frustrations. They work long hours, now you come talk about politics to them.”
“Politically the responses of the coloured working class has largely been one of, ‘Who’s the majority in this country? It’s the blacks. If they take over, what are we going to live under?… the unknown of who the blacks are. One can understand the extent to which apartheid creates the situation of the unknown. Their experiences are not one with that of the black working class. It’s amazing when you are talking to people the extent to which coloured people view black people in a racist way. It’s bizarre. It’s hell of an important factor in the coloured working class — they don’t see changes made that really affect them. Coloured workers are asking questions such as, ‘What will happen if the blacks take over? Are we going to be better off than we are under the white man?’”
By the late 1980s anti-apartheid organisations across the country were either in retreat or gradually rebuilding after the heavy repression of the repeated States of Emergency from 1985 to 1989. While a sense of pessimism dominated then, the re-emergence of the UDF in the guise of the Mass Democratic Movement gave new hope that the internal liberation movement could regroup. As February 1990 approached, the general expectation was that the liberation movements still had a long struggle ahead. There were many reasons for F.W. de Klerk’s watershed speech on 2 February 1990, but one factor must be acknowledged — the battles fought during the 1980s by thousands of South Africans had inflicted more harm on the apartheid state than was fully realised at the time.
Conclusion
The oral history quotations of political activists that I have selected and interpreted suggest that the vast majority of people in urban communities in Cape Town were not apathetic. Many, especially the youth, were very politicised and believed in different strands of Marxist theory. However, the politics of many other people, especially the older generation, were more cautious and conservative. This does not mean that they had no political ideology. On the contrary, they did have political views, usually anti-apartheid views, but these views often did not match the approaches taken by liberation organisations. It must also be remembered that the 1980s allowed very little space to debate these issues openly. In post-1994 South Africa we have the democratic freedom to do this, but we must engage in these debates in a non-judgmental way. As both the 1994 and 1999 general elections indicate, a similar diversity of political opinions still exists within coloured communities. Many activists and writers, including myself, do not agree with the conservative ideologies some people believe, but it is a reality we must continue to analyse with empathyand locate within the specific historical context of Cape Town.
empathy— the ability to imagine why people think and believe as they do; putting oneself “in the other person’s shoes”. Empathy does not mean we have to sympathise or agree with the other person, but that
we should try to understand them.