
ANC Today
What was the fundamental objective of the ANC when it was formed in 1912? Did the present ANC leaders, especially since June 1955 pursue the primary goal of the 1912 ANC as envisaged by the founding fathers including the African Kings amongst them? Is the present ANC 100 years old or 57 years old? Does it have the same objectives and policies as the 1912 ANC? Why was South Africa last to be “liberated” on the African Continent, and without repossession of the land, economic power and with so much poverty among the African people?
On the 8th of January 1912 when opening the inaugural conference of the ANC (then called the South African Native National Congress [SANNC]), Dr. Pixley ka Seme said, “Kings of the royal blood and gentlemen of our race, we have gathered here to consider and discuss a scheme my colleagues have decided to place before you….In the land of our birth, Africans are treated as hewers of wood and drawers of water. The whites have formed what is known as the Union of South Africa in which we have no voice.”
African kings had fought many wars of national resistance against colonialism for over 2OO years until their spears succumbed to the guns of the colonial aggressors. All had their lands forcefully taken from them. Others like King Hintsa had fallen by the bullet of the foreign invader in combat defending the African country against rapacious colonial forces.
What Precipitated Formation of ANC in 1912?
An ANC leader, Dr. S. Moridi Molema described these colonialists in 1952 as “men who are nothing else but robbers, villains and traitors to the highest and noblest teachings of Christianity which they so blatantly profess, men shockingly contemptuous of their conscience and now in a frenzy of self-adulation preparing to embrace each other and shake their bloody hands…and ready to commence another evil era of rapine and oppression.”
The colonial laws that precipitated the formation of the ANC in 1912 were the Union of South Africa Act 1909 and the Native Land Act 1913.The British Parliament enacting the Union of South Africa read as follows: “1. This Act may be cited as the South Africa Act 1909…44. The qualifications of a member of the House of Assembly shall be as follows: He must… be a British subject of European descent.”
In 1909, there were five million Africans in Azania (South Africa). But this union of colonial settlers was as follows: Cape Colony (167,546), Natal (34,784), Transvaal (106,493), and Orange River Colony (41,014). This was a total population of 349,537 colonial settlers according to the 1904 Census. The five million indigenous Africans remained helpless spectators as the tragedy of their land dispossession unfolded before them. The draconian British colonial law was followed by another genocide law called the Native Land Act 1913. This colonial law allocated 93% of the African country to 349,837 European settlers and 7% to five million Africans.
Sol Plaatje who became the first Secretary of ANC in 1912 wrote about why Africans were dispossessed of their land: “In the harvest of 1911, there was panic among white farmers because an African had garnered 3OOO bags of wheat and another 1,6OO bags…in a neighbourhood where their white neighbours reaped 300 to 400 bags of wheat. African export produce was looming in the not distant future. Then public opinion which in this country stands for white opinion asserted itself. ‘Where will we get servants?’ It was asked, ‘if the Kaffirs are allowed to become skilled? A Kaffir with 3000 bags of wheat! What will he do with the money? If they are inclined to herd pedigree stock let them improve their masters (whites) cattle and cultivate for them.”
Earl Glen, a British official had put the issue of land dispossession of the African in South Africa, colonially clear: “The Africans are generally looked upon by Whites as an inferior race whose interests must be systematically disregarded when they come into competition with their own, and should be governed with a view to the advantage of the superior race. For this reason two things must be afforded to white colonists obtaining LAND…the Kaffir should be made to furnish as large and cheap labour as possible.”
ANC Founders In Talks With King George V On Land Dispossession In 1914
There was now, panic among the African leaders and their people. On 20th July 1914, the leaders of the newly formed ANC armed with the mandate from the kings and African people of this country went to England to present a petition to King George V, protesting land dispossession of the African people. They were President John L Dube, Secretary Sol Plaatje, Walter Rubusana, Thomas Mapikela and Saul Msane.
In part, their petition read that Africans “loved their country with a most intense love…that their land had been taken away from them, their military and other institutions brought to nought.” The petition of the five ANC founders demanded “that the natives ( Africans) be put into possession of land in proportion to their numbers and on the same conditions as the white race.” The African leaders to London achieved nothing except for a London daily newspaper favourable report on the cause of their mission in England which read thus “In carving out estates for themselves in Africa, the white races have shown little regard for the claims of the black man. They have appropriated his LAND and have taken away his economic freedom and have left him in a worse case than they found him….That the African has been dispossessed may be illustrated by the facts in regard to the Union of South Africa. Here blacks compared with whites are in the proportion of FOUR to ONE, but are in legal occupation of only one fifteenth of their land…the deputation of Natives (ANC leaders) now in England have appealed to the imperial government for protection. They asked for the suspension of the Native Land Act 1913….”
“Settlers Are Receivers Of Stolen Goods “ – A British Humanitarian
Some justice conscious Whites spoke about the land dispossession of the African people. Here are a few examples:
a. “The active seizure by force or guile of lands actually in possession of the Africans was a blunder of the first magnitude and an act of injustice.” – Sir Godfrey Lagden;
b. “The mistake we made in South Africa in the past was our failure in reserving sufficient land for the future of the natives and the problem we have in consequence on our hands is one of the most difficult.” – Jan Smuts in 1930;
c. “Aborigines have had wholesale robbery of territory committed upon them and settlers have become receivers of stolen goods.” – Blackhouse, a British Humanitarian told his own British government.
The Present ANC Repudiated Land Dispossession Of Africans 57 Years Ago
The present ANC is not 100 years old. It abandoned the fundamental objectives of the 1912 ANC fifty seven years ago. In 1955, a section of the 1912 ANC leadership was captured by a section of the white ruling class. Despite the background of the Union of South Africa Act 1909 and the Native Land Act 1913, in 1955 the authors of the Freedom Charter preamble falsely proclaimed: “We, the people of South Africa, declare for all our country and the world to know: that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white…and therefore, we the people of South Africa black and white together, equals, countrymen and brothers adopt the Charter.”
This was a colossal colonial fraud. 57 years after this deception there are two “nations” in South Africa. One is extremely rich and white minority and the other is extremely poor and 80% African majority. In 1943, 1944, 1948 and 1949 the Congress Youth League had formulated Four Freedom Documents. The 1912 ANC had adopted these documents as its policy. It implemented them under Presidents A.B. Xuma, Dr. James Moroka and Chief Albert Luthuli. The Freedom Charter defectors threw them into the political dustbin and replaced them with this so-called Freedom Charter.
On the economy the 1944 document had proclaimed, “The Congress Youth League holds that political democracy remains an empty form without substance unless it is properly grounded on a base of economic democracy….Land: The re-division of land among farmers and peasants of all nationalities in proportion to their numbers….The improvement of land, the reclamation of denuded areas and conservation of water supplies….Education: The ultimate goal of African Nationalism in so far as education is concerned, is one hundred percent literacy among the people in order to ensure the realisation of an effective democracy…. Some of the means to that end are: Free compulsory education for all children, with its concomitants of adequate accommodation, adequate training facilities and adequate remuneration for teachers…..”
A Section Of The 1912 ANC That Rejected The Freedom Charter Declared:
“Following the capture of a portion of the Black leadership of South Africa by a section of the white ruling class, the masses of our people are in extreme danger of losing sight of the objective of our struggle…. This captured leadership claims to be fighting for freedom when in truth it is fighting to perpetuate the tutelage of the African people. It is tooth and nail against Africans gaining effective control of their LAND….It has completely abandoned the objectives of freedom. It has joined the ranks of the reactionaries. It is no longer within the ranks of the liberation movement….These leaders after doing a dirty job namely, seeing to it that the African is deprived for all time of his inherent right to control his country effectively, of seeing to it that whatsoever new social order is established in this country, the essentials of white domination are retained, even though its frills and trappings has been labelled multi-racialism by their masters.” – Excerpts from THE PAN AFRICANIST MANIFESTO adopted by the PAC in 1959.
“The Declaration In The Charter Uneven” – ANC President, Albert Luthuli
The ANC President Luthuli did not know who drafted the Freedom Charter. “I can only speak vaguely about its preparations that went before….” he wrote in his book LET MY PEOPLE GO (First Edition). “The main disadvantage from which it suffered was that the branches submitted materials for the Charter at a very late hour – too late in fact, for the statement to be boiled down into a comprehensive statement. It was not possible for the National Action Committee to circulate the draft carefully….The result is that the declaration in the Charter is UNEVEN.”
The ANC President who was elected according to the fundamental objectives and policy of the ANC as founded in 1912 has said that the Freedom Charter is open to criticism and is vague. There was definitely a fundamental change in the policy of the 1912 ANC in 1955.
A section of ANC leaders and members of the ANC who stood by the fundamental objectives of the ANC as constituted in 1912 declared, “In 1949, we got the African people to accept the nation-building programme of that year. We have consistently and honestly stuck to that programme which according to us is in irreconcilable conflict with the 1949 programme of action seeing that LAND no longer belongs to the African people….
In numerous ANC conferences, we have made it clear that we are committed to the overthrow of white colonial domination and restoration of land to its rightful owners. We are now launching openly on our own, as custodians of the ANC policy as it was formulated in 1912 and pursued up to the time of ‘Congress Alliance’.”
The 1955 ANC Is The Anti-thesis of the 1912 ANC
The fundamental change in the 1955 ANC policy is affirmed by Ernest Harsh the author of SOUTH AFRICA: WHITE RULE BLACK REVOLT, when he writes, “Because of its hostility to militant African Nationalism and its policy of seeking blocs with white ‘democratic’ forces, the South African Communist Party bore a certain degree of responsibility for the change in the ANC policies.”
In 1984, General Sebastian Mabote, the Chief Commander of the Mozambican Army explained on behalf of President Samora Machel why his country agreed to support the Zimbabwe freedom fighters in Rhodesia, but was not prepared to give the same measure of aid to the ANC of South Africa. He said, “The Zimbabwe guerrillas are fighting for self-determination, independence and liberty. In South Africa the ANC is carrying on a fight for civil rights and not an armed struggle for national liberation.” – (Sowetan 10th March 1984)
Consequences Of Changing 1912 ANC Fundamental Policy In 1955
The 1955 ANC became a civil rights movement. In 1994 it negotiated “democracy” and not equitable redistribution of land and resources according to population numbers. The Native Land Act 1913 through which Africans were dispossessed is entrenched in Section 25(7) of the “New South Africa” constitution. This civil rights movement and “Freedom Charter” ANC government has laws for issues the dispossessed people of this country never asked for. Some of them are on homosexuals, same sex marriages, abortion “on demand,” prostitutes who are now called “sex workers” and so on. Their government is infested with endemic corruption that is destroying the country because the Charterists have lost the 1912 ANC vision for this country.
The negotiations the ANC pursued at CODESA with the apartheid Nationalist Party in 1994 were not in accord with the fundamental objectives of the 1912 ANC. John Pilger in his book, BETRAYAL OF SOUTH AFRICAN REVOLUTION reminds how in September 1985 the Freedom Charter ANC leaders met a group of whites in Lusaka, led by the chairman of the Anglo-American Corporation, Gavin Relly. The Johannesburg stock market had crashed and the apartheid regime defaulted on its debt and the chieftains of South African capital took fright. Their message to the ANC leaders in exile was that ‘transition’ to a black-governed liberal democracy was possible, only if ‘order’ and ‘stability’ were guaranteed. This was reference to a “free market” state where social justice would not be a priority.
What followed later were secret meetings that took place in England. This is the very England where King George V had ignored the land dispossession of Africans raised there by the founders of the ANC. This time the meeting was with the Afrikaner elite.
As Pilger puts it, “The prime movers who had underpinned and profited from apartheid – such as the British mining giant Consolidated Fields, picked up the bill for the classical wines and malt whisky scoffed around the fire place at Mells Park House. The aim was for the Pretoria regime to split the ANC between the exile moderates with whom they could do business and the majority who made up those resisting in the townships.”
Prof. Sampie Terreblanch observes, “The ANC’s core leaders effectively sold its sovereign freedom to implement an independent and appropriate socio-economic policy for a mess of potage when it entered into several compromises with the corporate sector and its global partners. These unfortunate transactions must be retracted or renegotiated.” – (A HISTORY OF INEQUALITY IN SOUTH AFRICA 1652- 2OO2).
If the leaders who founded the ANC in 1912 and those who presented a petition on land dispossession of the African people to King George V were alive, this year, what would they say? How would African kings and those warriors who died in those many battle fields to defend this country against colonialism, feel when they see that for 57 years, the land question in South Africa has not been a fundamental issue with this ANC since 1955? It is now buried in the “miracle” “rainbow nation.”
If “South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white…equals, countrymen and brothers…” why is the ANC spending billions of Rand it has not got, buying land for blacks from whites on an exploitative ‘willing seller – willing buyer’ basis and inflated selling prices?. This is getting the ANC government deeper in debt without resolving the land question in South Africa.
The demand that was made by the 1912 ANC leaders “that the Africans must be put into possession of land according to their numbers” has not been met. This primary demand of the African national liberation struggle was betrayed in 1955. Section 25 of the “New South Africa” constitution is the same thing as the Native Land Act 1913.No sane nation has ever commemorated its genocide or spat on the graves of its ancestors.
By Dr. Motsoko Pheko
(The writer is the author of several books, the latest of which is HOW FREEDOM CHARTER BETRAYED THE DISPOSSESSED. He is the former Representative of the victims of apartheid at the United Nations in New York and at the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva as well as former Member of the South African Parliament. Cell 0761414204)
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February 21, 2012 at 11:00 pm
Cormrades i welcome your oublication as its shedding light on a whole political situation of the country histtoric and present.Im bot a Pac member and as such have no beef about it , my concern is your obssession with the ANC and seek to potray it as criminal and devoid of intrgrity and committment despite its landlslide victory in the elections.
if the PAC WAS IN POWER IT WOULD HAVE WRITTEN THE HISTORY OF STRUGGLE THE SAME WAY THE ANC DOES IT.
I Trust this will be the stard a fruitful discussion on matters affacting society rather being entangled in trivial histroric grublings which gains no votes at the polls.
February 22, 2012 at 1:53 pm
Nkosi yam, nobody is pushing a PAC agenda as far as I am concerned, if anything people are espousing a broader Pan-Africanist viewpoint, which by the way does not exclude the ANC given the “Africanists” in the midsts there. This is not an electioneering platform also as far as I am aware, so let us stop seeing discussions here as nevessarilly targeting the ANC or being anti-ANC please! Views expressed here are Pan-African in character and seek to establish a TRUTHFUL historical perspective of where we come from and of how we ended up having no land in the country of our birth, and then seek ways of regaining what we lost. It is that simple. This is an open forum discussion, no secret deals or hidden agendas. If the ANC or anybody and organisation fall within the ambit of the contentious points raised here, then so be it, including the PAC for that matter. Stop pointing out things that are not there thus creating a false impression of this forum and Mayibuye; my understanding is it is not anti-ANC, it is anti-lies. We pursue the truth here thus speak the truth especially given we have been tirelessly bombraded with other people’s version of the truth even on who we are!! I am not a PAC member but like and support some of the viewpoints expressed here because I espouse them too. Be broad minded in your political outlook ntate, move out of your parochialism. Africa needs true Africans, people who love this cntinent and its peoples, and will do the utmost to rectify the lies, misdemeanours and misadventures which include the murder of our people, the racism which still exists even today in our country, the silly provocative apartheid architectured thinking on land by some white people and other ignorant Black people even ntoday in our country, the list is long. As I said earlier, there is work to be done still. Mayibiuye! ps- By the way Mandela said this at FNB stadium when he addressed the crowds soon after his release from jail in 1990; Mayibuye! Amandla! See mnumzana?! Uyaqonda na?? Uhleli??
February 23, 2012 at 10:16 pm
matters that are affecting our people are entangled in history that we are so scared to look at. History is the product of our culture and in turn it informs us to value and create a culture that will benefit the present and future generations. Anybody ignoring the lessons of history is like someone driving a car without a rear-view mirror. As drivers to a future prosperous Africa, we cannot afford to ignore the history of decolonizing Africa. Self criticism is important for our growth.
January 30, 2012 at 1:19 am
OUR HISTORY – OUR CULTURE – OUR FREEDOM
When west European nations formed a scheme to enslave and later colonize Africa, they had to justify their actions by a fake religion/creed.Those who study and analyze the King James version of the bible will understand what I try to convey in this short article. Pure spiritual narratives have been transformed into historical events which are out of their timeline. Historical characters have been falsified for cruel motives. We are talking of plagiarism in a grand scale. Egypt, the center of ancient African civilization is grossly misrepresented and her history mutilated. African Kings/Pharaohs are not even mentioned by their names except for fabricated cruelties they were supposed to have committed. The basic community building block of mother-father and child as known by Africans was altered by these “holly” men to their fantasy of father-son and the holly ghost. The mother has been elbowed to make room for the ghost and only the son is favored in this union.
Wars of land dispossession and live stock theft, were never initiated until there were enough African converts to this fake religion/creed. Missionary work always preceded military operations because these wars were always fought on the backs of of misguided and mentally enslaved Africans. Today, many Africans are clinging to this religion which was invented for the sole purpose of enslaving our minds and cast us into empty shells of our true image. The greatest battle we have to win is that of reclaiming our souls from the clutches of this colonial religion. We must never allow our oppressors to define the path of our spiritual life. Reclaiming our souls from the tight grip of King James and his “holly” ghost will definitely hasten the demise of this cruel scheme against us and save our descendants from neocolonialism and its twins of material and spiritual poverty. Our ancestors have provided an ethical code of conduct for us in the form of forty two negative confessions. This ethical code of conduct is older than the ten commandments and thus, older than King James’ kingdom by thousands of years. The oppressed classes in European kingdoms saw through this cruel ploy when it was first tried on them and they rebelled against it. Individuals like Gerald Massey were propelled by history to expose the fake religion and lead the oppressed masses to the true spiritual values which were direct from Africa (source). Unfortunately, some of the European people who could have become our natural allies, have been mentally poisoned by material comfort just like the petty-bourgeois in Africa.
Africanism/Black-consciousness is the most sound revolutionary policy for us. It is the only ideology that will safeguard us against the counter-revolution. It flows naturally from our history and it connects us to our ancestors who were in direct control of their lives. As long as we know that it is a creed for liberation and not for oppression, it does not matter what our detractors think of us and our ideology. We have principled allies internationally and must continue to strengthen our bonds with all oppressed people around the world. We will be triumphant in our cause for justice and liberty as long as we follow the natural laws that govern this universe. Every oppressed nation/class must be led by ideas and individuals that come from the same material and spiritual conditions as them towards liberty and total freedom. Africans, especially our youth, must form study groups and never allow confused and ignorant people to lead them just because of popularity. Here is a short suggested list of books to study :
1. Slavery and Capitalism by Eric Williams.
2. The Black Jacobins by C.L. R. James
3. The Cultural unity of Africa by Cheik Anta Diop
4. The washing of the spears- The rise and fall of the Zulu nation by
Donald R. Morris.
5. Gerald Massey Lectures by Gerald Massey.
6. Ancient Egypt- The light of the World by Gerald Massey.
7. Pan-Africanism or Communism by George Padmore.
8. Africa must Unite by Kwame Nkrumah
9. The cult of the black virgin by Ean begg.
10. The Ancient Egyptian roots of Christianity by Moustafa Gadalla of the
Tehuti research Foundation.
January 28, 2012 at 1:04 pm
LETTER FROM KING LEOPOLD II OF BELGIUM
Letter from King Leopold II of Belgium to Colonial Missionaries, 1883 “Reverends, Fathers and Dear Compatriots:
The task that is given to fulfill is very delicate and requires much tact. You will go certainly to evangelize, but your evangelization must inspire all Belgium interests. Your principal objective in our mission in the Congo is never to teach the niggers to know God, this they know already.They speak and submit to a Mungu, one Nzambi, one Nzakomba, and what else I don’t know. They know that to kill, to sleep with someone else’s wife, tolie and to insult is bad.
Have courage to admit it; you are not going to teach them what they know already. Your essential role is to facilitate the task of administrators and industrial, which means you will go to interpret the gospel in the way it will be the best to protect your interests in that part of the world. For these things, you have to keep watch on dis-interesting our savages from the richness that is plenty [in their underground. To avoid that they get interested in it, and make you murderous] competition and dream one day to overthrow you.
Your knowledge of the gospel will allow you to find texts ordering, and encouraging your followers to love poverty, like “Happier are the poor because they will inherit the heaven” and, “It’s very difficult for the rich to enter the kingdom of God.” You have to detach from them and make them disrespect everything which gives courage to affront us. I make reference to their Mystic System and their war fetish-warfare protection-which they pretend not to want to abandon, and you must do everything in your power to make it disappear.
Your action will be directed essentially to the younger ones, for they won’t revolt when the recommendation of the priest is contradictory to their parent’s teachings. The children have to learn to obey what the missionary recommends, who is the father of their soul. You must singularly insist on their total submission and obedience, avoid developing the spirit in the schools, teach students to read and not to reason. There, dear patriots, are some of the principles that you must apply. You will find many other books, which will be given to you at the end of this conference. Evangelize the niggers so that they stay forever in submission to the white colonialists, so they never revolt against the restraints they are undergoing. Recite every day-”Happy are those who are weeping because the kingdom of God is for them.”
Convert always the blacks by using the whip. Keep their women in nine months of submission to work freely for us. Force them to pay you in sign ofrecognition-goats, chicken or eggs-every time you visit their villages. And make sure that niggers never become rich. Sing every day that it’s impossible for the rich to enter heaven. Make them pay tax each week at Sunday mass. Use the money supposed for the poor, to build flourishing business centers. Institute a confessional system, which allows you to be good detectives denouncing any black that has a different consciousness contrary to that of the decision-maker. Teach the niggers to forget their heroes and to adore only ours. Never present a chair to a black that comes to visit you. Don’t give him more than one cigarette. Never invite him for dinner even if he gives you a chicken every time you arrive at his house.
— “The above speech which shows the real intention of the Christian missionary journey in Africa was exposed to the world by Mr Moukouani Muikwani Bukoko, born in the Congo in 1915, and who in 1935 while working in the Congo, bought a second hand Bible from a Belgian priest who forgot the speech in the Bible.”
January 30, 2012 at 8:45 am
Quite, and later this attitude would be instrumental in informing the murder of Patrice Lumumba and the genocide that the people of Congo were subjected to! To think that at the time of independence the Congo only had 6 yes six indigenous Congolese graduates of any discipline! Abelungu ngo-damn indeed!
January 28, 2012 at 11:11 am
A million thanks to Dr. Pheko. I know Dr. Pheko from New York where we were constituted the New York branch of the PAC and interacted with him at the PAC UN Observer mission. Indeed, he would invite some of us to form the PAC delegation whenever a PAC leader came to the UN. He worked with Sam Makhanda, who later participated in the fraudulent Codesa process for which he was rewarded with plump jobs as a diplomat by the ANC.
I totally disagree with some of the sentiments expressed here with regards to this Vermeulen woman. It is not our responsibility to “educate” racists who know the truth but pretend otherwise! Every European knows what happened. They know that they did not just come out of the soil! With tongue in cheek, this woman dares to insult our intelligence, distort our history in order to perpetuate the rape of our land and we seek to “educate her”. One would expect such liberalism from the ANC. We Pan-Afrikanists have no business conducting business with arrogant racists who think they know the history and geography of our country better than us! If white people want to truly comprehend the intricacies of our dynamic history, let them do so on their own. If they want to truly address the consequences of their crime, let them state openly that they have committed some of the most despicable crimes humanity has ever witnessed.
If, through this avenue we wish to “dialogue” with the people who dispossessed us, we will, once more be adopting a position inherently belonging to the ANC. Ours is not to plead with whites to understand us or to do us a favour by sympathising with us. With contempt and anger, I wish to tell this Vermeulen woman to crawl back under the rock from whence she came, mind her business and stop lying to us with her superiority complex that she can teach us our own history! Izwe Lethu!
January 30, 2012 at 8:28 am
Tyaphu!…
January 25, 2012 at 10:17 pm
nakedi, i have read diop’s african origin of civilisation: myth or reality around 1989 and reviewed it for botswana’s mmegi newspaper. in fact, i read almost all of diop’s books such as the cultural unity of black africa and also reviewed it and civilisation or barbarism: an authentic anthropology. the best book by gerald massey is ancient egypt: the light of the world. i have john clarke, i also read yosef ben-jocannen’s african origins of the major western religions and also reviewed it for mmegi in 1992. i compiled a list of books for pac leadership during my presentation on publicity and propaganda last november. i still believe that that vermeulen lady should be encouraged to read this web magazine and express her honest views. let us remember that sobukwe said the mision of the pac was not only to liberate africans but also the rest of humanity.
January 26, 2012 at 9:12 am
Very good then Sam, we are making progress. Of course people like Ms Vermeulen need a paradigm shift or re-education, take your pick, just like most white South Africans do! The minute they stop denying and refusing to take responsibility for the muderous past their rule came with in this country, the sooner we will make genuine inroads towards reconciliation and addressing the real issues like the land question for instance. The lesson for people like her is twofold really, one, that the books and material are there, she must read or even engage any of us, secondly, there are some white people who understand and actively support Pan-Africanism. I can refer her to Costa Gazides who used to be with us in Mthatha, and was almost stabbed to death at a funeral in Mthatha for the Mpendulo kids who were murdered, yes murdered, by the apartheid death squads looking for APLA cadres! I last saw him in East London. Anyway, there have been many claimants to the ideals of Pan-Africanism and being an African, perhaps this is the discussion we should be having right now. Where is Pan-Africanism today, what does it mean to be an African in the world today, by extension what currency does being Black carry if any because there is White currency; is there something called Black or White out there given all the views flying around on this topic, including by those who seek to obliterate this distinction which came with Europeans by the way??? For us in South Africa in particular, how far are we to having a value system that embodies the essence of our African humanity and person? We have work to do people.
January 24, 2012 at 9:41 am
Ohhh I love this, I love the books you quote people!!! Yes yes yes, people must read some of these authors and really get an epiphany, which is what Ms Vermin, sorry my sincerest apologies, Ms Vermeulen needs! Quite true Sam, she at least is more courageous than most White people I interact with on some rabidly racist blogs. But I give as much as I get, and I do not hide behind anonymity, in fact one site banned my comments because of my direct biting sharp candour, but still allow the garbage spewed by these naked racists! Their loss, let them wallow in their false self-belief as always. Fools, ignorance is bliss indeed, or as they say in Xhosa, oxam baya phaxulana! But the books, I quote some of these Black authors and personalities in my book “I Speak My Mind”, my list is long, from Toussaint, Dessallines, Harriet Tubman, Edward Wilmot Blyden, James Africanus Horton, Ignatius Sancho, Olaudah Equiano and Ottobah Quobna Cugoano, Mangaliso Sobukwe, Amilcar Cabral, Aime’ Cesaire, Martin Delany, Duse Mohammed Ali, Ras T Makonen, Patrice Lumumba, Henry Sylvester Williams, George Padmore, Ladipo Solanke, including some of those you Sam and Moshe mention above. Read Cheikh Anta Diop’s The African Origin of Civilisation: Myth or Reality?, Chicago, Lawrence Hill Books,1974, followed by John Henrik Clarke’s The African Holocaust-The slave trade from Education for a new reality in the African World! Then see Marius Fontanes’s Les Egytes 1880 volume! Don’t start on me getntlemen and ladies, I never stop once cranked up. Mandiyeke apha, am gonna listen to Ben Webster now blowing the blues in Bye Bye Blackbird (Miles also does justice to this song) and level off with Oscar Peterson nad Milt Jackson in John Brown’s Body, the same white John Brown who in about 1859 fought in the anti-slavery drive to free Black people, and was hung for taking the fight to the White slave masters. Uyeva Vermeulen? Ncincilili….
January 23, 2012 at 5:08 pm
there is a document by joshua raboroko titled ‘the africanist case’ which can be accessed from members of the research unit whose chairman is jaki seroke. i quoted from it in my citizen article of 29 december. books can also be bought or ordered from baba buntu’s group. the editor can help with his numbers. i don’t remember them off the top of my head. somebody mentioned xarra books. books can also be ordered through xarra books. that’s where i ordered my copy of frantz fanon’s ‘the wretched of the earth’. other good authors are cheikh anta diop, yosef ben-jocannen. john g. jackson, george james, w.e.b dubois, edward wilmot blyden, marcus garvey just to name a few. that vermeulen lady will one day see the light. at least she is forthright about what she thinks and doesn’t hide under the veil of anonymity. she writes her name up-front. it is good that she reads this web magazine where she can be exposed to the world of ideas of the african world. we should remember that she’s not the only one who has those erroneous ideas. there are millions out there who still must come out of the closet so to speak. there are those who are incorrgible unfortunately. the shelves of libraries of the world are stacked with books that contain what is tantamount to tear gas. has anyone inhaled teargas? it isn’t pleasant at all. so we have people in this country, including black people by the way, who have inhaled teargas from the books i described above. they can also be found in the high echelons of power, those some call their leaders. when they open their mouths the stench that issues from there can suffocate a person. that stench is dangerous to young minds.
January 23, 2012 at 5:03 pm
there is a document by joshua raboroko titled ‘the africanist case’ which can be accessed from members of the research unit whose chairman is jaki seroke. i quoted from it in my citizen newspaper of 29 december. books can also be bought or ordered from baba buntu’s group. the editor can help with his numbers. i don’t remember them off the top of my head. somebody mentioned xarra books. books can also be ordered through xarra books. that’s where i ordered my copy of frantz fanon’s ‘the wretched of the earth’. other good authors are cheikh anta diop, yosef ben-jocannen. john g. jackson, george james, w.e.b dubois, edward wilmot blyden, marcus garvey just to name a few. that vermeulen lady will one day see the light. at least she is forthright about what she thinks and doesn’t hide under the veil of anonymity. she writes her name up-front. it is good that she reads this web magazine where she can be exposed to the world of ideas of the african world. we should remember that she’s not the only one who has those erroneous ideas. there are millions out there who still must come out of the closet so to speak. there are those who are incorrgible unfortunately. the shelves of libraries of the world are stacked with books that contain what is tantamount to tear gas. has anyone inhaled teargas? it isn’t pleasant at all. so we have people in this country, including black people by the way who have inhaled teargas from the books i described above. they can also be found in the high echelons of power. when they open their mouths the stench that issues from there can suffocate a person.
January 20, 2012 at 9:27 am
Mayihlome! This wonderful, I’m most greatful and humbled by the light that has been bestowed upon us, I cannot help but feel proud of our forefathers’ struggles and at the same time as energised to be the change I want to see, I certainly look forward to the day of our true emancipation. I also make an avowal to inform as many young people as myself of the nourishment I’ve received, I want to get actively involved, and as such I have started reading, please if possible have a books section where can browse through a list/index of relevant books we can go out and buy and possiblly have a platform where people may also suggest/rate books. I’ve noticed that the shared articles drop a lot of book titles and I must confess Exclusive Books and CNA don’t even stock such books, I struggled to even find How Can Man Die Better on Robert Sobukwe. Keep up the good work and thank you once more for sharing these insightful and thought provoking articles.
Ngiyabonga/Ndiyabulela/ Ke ea leboha ma-Afrika , iZwe-Lethu!
January 20, 2012 at 2:50 pm
You can order books fromTokoloho Publishers through website: http://www.drmotsokopheko.com. You may also contact Xara Books @ 011-4030947 for more reference. I hope this helps…
January 21, 2012 at 10:49 am
I’m most grateful!
January 19, 2012 at 2:01 pm
South Africa belongs to the Bushmen, etc. Africans came from the north at the same time whites came from the south. Communism is totalatarian destruction of all infrastructure, welfare funds, and agriculture where only the ‘elite’ at the top has everything and commits genocide on their own population, as the rest of AFRICA has proven. Open your eyes and stop spreading lies.
January 19, 2012 at 2:06 pm
Be a man, be what you are trying to be – a man of integrity who speaks the truth. Post my comments. Don’t hide behind lies. South Africans of all races had enough of political lies.
January 20, 2012 at 11:15 am
Renette you need to get over your false apartheid fabricated history which was only meant to reduce the nativity of blacks in this country. It pays to read more than the lies your forefathers created to justify their inhumane policy positions.
January 20, 2012 at 2:24 pm
Renette with all due respect you are either hopelessly lost beyond redemption or are a denialist like most White people in this country. Go get an education meisie, not the rubbish you were fed in the name of creating and preserving a White master race. If what you spew out here is the result, then to me at least you prove once more the level of dumbness that your people displayed. You see vacuous jaundiced and narcisstic arrogance and boorishness breeds a generation of emotionally unintelligent people. Start removing the wool from your eyes, save yourself, at least now you can do it because Black people have enabled you and your ilk to do that. We also freed you! Exercise the right choice this time and join the real community of humanity! Mayibuye!…
January 22, 2012 at 1:18 am
First, you need to stop calling Africans Bushmen. You need to visit the northern hemisphere where your ancestors migrated from. You will be amazed at the information stored in places like the British museum, the Vatican and academic institutions. Perhaps when you come back to Azania, you will be knowledgeable of world history especially African history. Search for these historians: Gerald Massey, Keith Seele, Robert Draper, Cheik Anta Diop, Constatin Volney, Champolin, Drusulla Dunjee,
Hendrik Clarke. Hopefully they will enlighten you that Africans have been
all over Africa since the beginning of times. When we migrated back to Southern Africa, we came back home which our ancestors left several thousands years ago.
January 29, 2012 at 1:28 pm
I’m white, to tell you this and I’m ashamed of our past in South Africa, I do understand it’s hard to live in a a so-call rain bow nation with having to endorsed the history. It’s hard, I won’t have been to happy, in fact I would of hated if KNOWN what happened, I know I can’t or we say sorry and forget what happened, that’s wrong to say. But I plea with my heart don’t judge every white person on Apartheid. The past is sad, I really would have wished their was another solution, that we as a human race in South Africa can live in peace, without judging (Politically) , unite together, with having a peaceful past. I understand you want justice, we all want justice. I’m just an 16 year old KID, I speak Afrikaans and I live abroad, I still ashamed of the past
Can I tell you something (all), I want to be in Politic’s, I want to make a difference in my Country, I want to be an African, But I see that it’s not possible, there’s too much hatred (which I understand) in South Africa, democracy is not possible, we can’t have debates, because the same arguments will be used every time
Hahaha, if you guys have read it this far, then I’m impressed
All I want to ask you (everyone) a simple Question, can you say I’m African?
February 2, 2012 at 12:46 am
You do not need permision from anybody to be African. It must come from your heart.
January 19, 2012 at 11:06 am
Thank You Elder Motsoko Pheko. WE needed to hear and know this. @ Z Menze, its very true what you say. I have taken it upon me to print and share these. by the time this first 6 months ends, be rest assured a qauter of Port Elizabeth will be aware of such info…Long live the PAC of Azania.
January 19, 2012 at 10:10 am
Hiya, only question I ask is why did it take some of you leaders this long to figure this all out?? As I ask in my book, are we Black people that stupid or far gone in being defeated mentally and emotionally that we are this lost?! I have always said that if this is the extent of the freedom that so many Black people fought for, then there is a massive fraud that is being played out here, this is treason!! Somebody needs to be charged with selling out! On the other hand I am glad that some of the things that some of us have been saying since the mid-eighties are sadly playing themselves out right before our eyes! Once you drive rights over and above social justice then you have lost your cause. As I say in my book, people need tangible and palpable change, not cosmetic window dressing. The chickens have come home to roost and sadly Black people are once more at the bottom of the totem pole. Have we learnt anything from history, oh yes I hear you ask which history?? Plaatjie, Dube, Seme, Lembede, Sobukwe, Biko the list is long, have been betrayed, just like the majority of Black South Africans. Rea kae, siya phi? Back in the dark hole from whence we come! That is the plight and destiny of the Black person. When will it change?
January 19, 2012 at 10:01 am
This is the information not available to the masses of the people of Azania. Lets make sure that everyone gets it as quick as possible. Azania is our land.