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Texts :: focus |
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International Socialism and the Native: no labour movement without the black proletariat |
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by International Socialist League Previously published: The International, 7 December 1917 |
16 Oct 2005
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"The abolition of the Native Indenture, Passport and Compound Systems and
the lifting of the Native Workers to the Political and Industrial Status of
the White is an essential step towards the Emancipation of the Working-class
in South Africa." |
From The International, 7 December 1917,
published by the revolutonary syndicalist
International Socialist League [ISL],
Johannesburg, South Africa
The Management Committee of the ISL has issued the following statement to
the Branches as a basis of discussion at the Annual Conference. The MC
recommends this statement of our attitude towards the native worker to be
embodied in the League platform for 1918 propaganda. Comrades are invited to
read it with a view to discussion, and amendment if they so desire, at the
Conference of the League, which will be held in January 6th next.
"The abolition of the Native Indenture, Passport and Compound Systems and
the lifting of the Native Workers to the Political and Industrial Status of
the White is an essential step towards the Emancipation of the Working-class
in South Africa."
Society is divided into two classes: the working class, doing all the
labour; and the idle class, living on the fruits of labour. Strictly
speaking therefore there is no 'Native Problem'. There is only a working
class problem.
But within the working class arises the problem of the native worker. In all
countries the influx of cheap labour is used as a whip wherewith to beat the
whole of the working class. In South Africa the cheap labourer, being black,
is doubly resented by the higher paid worker. And the employers foment this
colour prejudice through their newspapers, and are thus able to wield the
whip of cheap labour with double effect.
The suicidal prejudice of the white workers against the coloured workers is
the only native problem. This prejudice manufactures the scabs that beat
both black and white in the day when the solidarity of all the workers is
essential to victory.
We speak therefore to the workers, and above all to those workers who look
forward to the emancipation of labour from wage slavery. There can be no
appeal to any section of society. outside the working-class, as their
interests are opposed to labour, and their opinions therefore of no account
to us.
One section of the workers cannot benefit itself at the expense of the rest
without betraying the hope of the children. Those who receive favours from
the master class may lift themselves out of the propertyless proletariat:
but their children will inherit the fear of the abyss which their fathers
helped to create.
The power of labour lies in its ability to stop, or to control industry. All
the workers are needed for this.
Labour, not Colour, is the watchword of solidarity.
If all those who labour cannot share in the emancipation of Labour, none can
be emancipated. "Labour cannot emancipate itself in the White while in the
Black it is branded." (Marx)
So long as we refuse to admit the native worker into the ranks of Labour
solidarity, so long will cheap labour pull down the white worker to the
native standard of existence.
But so soon as we welcome the native worker into equality on the industrial
field, then is he forthwith lifted up towards the white standard of living.
White standards are not in danger from the ambition of the native to
improve. White standards are endangered by the attempts to keep him down.
White standards will not be saved in South Africa by the White Labour
Policy. White standards will only be saved by the Black workers organising
industrially.
The highest social culture is safest in the keeping of the lowest paid
labourers.
What makes native labour so cheap and exploitable in South Africa? Laws and
regulations which, on the pretense of protecting society from barbarism,
degrade the native workers to the level of serfs and herded cattle for the
express uses of capital. These are:
The Passport system.
The Compound System.
The Native Indenture system.
The special penal laws which make it a crime for a native to absent himself
from work.
The denial of civil liberty and political rights.
All those things which place the native workers on a lower social plane than
the white workers are weapons in the hands of the employing class to be used
against all the workers, white and black.
These tyrant laws must be swept away. For these degrading conditions of
native labour are the abyss into which masses of the white workers are
continually being hurled by Capitalist competition.
Sweep them away! What pious horror is aroused by this demand! Unspeakable
calamities will follow, we are told. But are they not the very cause of the
social calamities they are supposed to guard against? Indeed, they are
themselves the greatest of social calamities.
The cause of Labour demands the abolition of the Pass, the Compound, and the
Indenture: and as the native workers gain in industrial solidarity, demands
for them complete political equality with their white fellow workers.
Only thus can the whole of the working class, white and black, march
unitedly forward to their common emancipation from wage slavery. |