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We will never allow Chris Hani to die
By: Blade Nzimande, SACP General Secretary
On 10 April next week, it will exactly be 10 years
since the cowardly assassination of our former General Secretary, Cde
Martin Thembisile Hani, popularly known as Chris. Two right wingers, we
are convinced as part of a bigger plot, gunned down Cde Chris at his home
in Dawn Park, near Boksburg.
This anniversary coincides with other important anniversaries
for our Party and our people. April 2003 also mark the tenth anniversaries
on the passing away of those giants of our struggle, Cdes Oliver Tambo
and Elias Motsoaledi. It is also the 30th anniversary of the 1973 workers'
strikes. Most significantly for our Party it is the 50th anniversary of
the reconstitution of the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) underground,
after its dissolution and banning in 1950, and re-emerged as the South
African Communist Party (SACP) in 1953. On the latter anniversary one
can't help noticing how cruel history can sometimes be. As we proudly
celebrate 50 years of the reconstitution of the SACP in 1953 and its steady
growth and strength, the National Party, which had thought it had destroyed
our Party and communist ideas in 1950, is now instead facing extinction.
One is tempted to adapt the old adage to describe this contrast and historical
irony:
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF, BUT THE SECOND TIME AS A FARCE!
The SACP, working together with the ANC, COSATU
and SANCO will hold more than 30 events across the length and breadth
of our country to remember and honour Hani as a hero of all our people.
The main national event will be the rally on 13 April 2003, in Umtata,
at the University of Transkei's stadium.
Hani's legacy
What is Hani's legacy that we seek to honour and
remember? Our message is simple - we must never allow Chris Hani to die.
He fought poverty and job losses. He fought for national liberation, people's
power and socialism. Let us build and strengthen the power and influence
of poor and working people. Workers and the poor need a strong ANC, SACP
and COSATU.
As we remember Chris Hani, we must remind ourselves of the
kinds of leaders and cadres we need in South Africa today. We want leaders
who are accountable to our people. We want a government that responds
to the needs of our people. We want local government councillors who report
back and listen to the problems of our people. This is the tradition of
the ANC that Hani lived and died for. That is why Hani was an ANC cadre,
leader and a communist.
In all these ways we will make Chris Hani's dream of a strong
SACP, a strong alliance and a socialist South Africa possible. In this
way Chris will live in us through our current struggles and the struggle
for socialism in our country"
For Hani socialism was not big words or concepts. In his
own words, "Socialism is not about big concepts and heavy theory.
Socialism is about decent shelter for those who are homeless. It is about
water for those who have no safe drinking water. It is about health care,
it is about a life of dignity for the old. It is about overcoming the
huge divide between urban and rural areas. It is about education for all
our people. Socialism is about rolling back the tyranny of the market.
As long as the economy is dominated by an un-elected, privileged few,
the case for socialism will exist." Born in rural poverty, Chris
Hani never forgot his roots. He was a leader who listened to the homeless,
the jobless, the landless, to women no less than men. He had confidence
and trust in ordinary people, and so they, in turn, had confidence and
trust in him!
When he was elected to the mammoth task to lead the SACP,
he proved himself a committed communist. Today he would be in Guguletu
calling for housing, tomorrow in the mines calling for an end to retrenchments,
dismissals and for workers to be paid a living wage. As if that was not
enough, two days later he would be in Venda calling for health improvement
and later march with teachers and students for quality public education.
The Chris Hani 10th Anniversary Memorial Month
This Friday, the 10th Anniversary Chris Hani Memorial
Month will be launched through the SACP's Chris Hani Poverty Eradication
Trail at Hani's home village in Sabalele, Cofimvaba, Eastern Cape. Through
the Chris Hani Poverty Eradication Trail we will be focusing on taking
forward the campaign of registration for social grants as part of the
theme of "United Action to Push back the Frontiers of Poverty"
through the mobilisation of volunteers - The Red October Brigades. This
takes forward the ANC's January 8 statement, government's campaign on
expanded social security and the SACP's 2002 Red October campaign.
On 10 April, the national, Gauteng Provincial and East Rand
District leadership of the ANC, SACP,. COSATU and SANCO will visit and
hold a memorial service at Hani's grave in Boksburg.
The Chris Hani Institute
One of the highlights of the Chris Hani Month will
be the launch of the Chris Hani Worker Leadership Development Institute
(Chris Hani Institute) The Institute will be launched through the Inaugural
Chris Hani Lecture on 15 April at the COSATU Central Committee. There
could be no better place to launch such an important and path breaking
initiative than in front of the more than 200 COSATU delegates that will
be gathered at this Central Committee, underlining the ownership of the
Institute by the workers of our country.
At its 7th Congress held in September 2000, COSATU took
a resolution to establish such an Institute, as an autonomous working
class think-tank and "academy to provide education and training
for selected youth, stewards and officials." COSATU had
identified the urgent need in the current period, for cadre development
in order to deepen class consciousness, to build organisation, to build
the capacity of trade unionists and shop stewards to engage and to develop
a layer of intellectual representatives of the working class.
One of the key features of apartheid South Africa was that
almost all the foundations that were in existence largely served and were
controlled by the rich and professional classes, with minimal focus on
the interests of the overwhelming majority of the people. Since 1990,
with the exception of institutions like the Nelson Mandela and Steve Biko
Foundations, South Africa has seen an emergence of even more foundations
and think-tanks primarily focused on the interests of the better off,
including racially or ethnically defined interests. The strengthening
of democracy in South Africa principally rests in the promotion and betterment
of the overwhelming majority of its people - who are predominantly black,
African, working class and poor. Other than government, major institutions
of society - business, media, cultural institutions - still largely serve
a white, male rich and middle class society, to the extent that the interests
of the working class and poor are relegated to the bottom.
It is also in the realm of ideas and communication that
there is hardly any systematic advocacy of the interests of the working
class and the poor in broader society. Most experts are either drawn from
the ranks of the better off or they tend to advocate for the interests
of the better off. Yet the battle of ideas is intensifying around the
kind of South Africa we want to build.
The establishment of such an Institute is an important dimension
in this battle of ideas, and it would definitely contribute towards enhancing
the voice, ideas and aspirations of the working class and the poor through
engaging in the public domain and engaging other major institutions of
South African society. For COSATU and the SACP this voice is concretely
about engaging strategically in order to advance the interests of the
working class and promoting socialist ideas and debate.
The life and memory of Chris Hani has become one of the
major symbols for the aspirations of the working class and the poor in
South Africa. His life, sacrifices, dedication and example captured a
person whose entire life was dedicated to the service of ordinary working
people and the poor. Whilst South Africa has many heroes and heroines
who lived and died for similar aspirations, but Chris Hani was murdered
on the eve of the beginnings of the realisation of the aspirations of
the majority of South Africans. His assassination also directly led to
the securing of 27 April 1994 as the date for the first ever democratic
elections in South Africa. His memory lives fondly in the hearts and minds
of millions of South African, particularly the working class and the poor.
This Institute would serve to institutionalise his memory, but most importantly,
as a monument to the aspirations of the ordinary working people and the
poor in South Africa.
One of the many outstanding qualities of comrade Chris Hani
was his ability to make revolutionary and socialist ideas accessible to
workers and the poor. Therefore an important aim of the institute would
be to continue this legacy, by researching and developing progressive
and socialist alternatives, making socialist ideas accessible, promoting
and popularising democratic and socialist alternatives. In addition it
will equip shop stewards, trade union officials, community activists,
women worker leaders and the children of the working class and the poor
with the knowledge and the confidence to take the struggle for democracy
and socialism to their communities, their workplaces, public spaces, the
media, government - essentially all of society.
It will be an institute guided in its work by the reality
that South Africa seeks to resolve three interrelated contradictions -
class, national and gender - not in isolation from, but in relationship
to each other. It will seek to deliberately influence SA's transition
in the interests of overwhelming majority - study the transition and develop
alternatives beyond the terrain of capitalism. We need to create space
for revolutionaries to reflect on alternatives, to envision the real possibilities
for change. Too often we are caught up with responding to neo-liberal
policy proposals and trying to find ways to ameliorate their effects on
workers. While reforms may be necessary in any revolution, it is critical
to continuously create space to think outside of the bounds of capitalism,
so that reforms do not become the end point.
It is also our hope that the Institute will seek to train,
equip women worker leaders as a very important dimension of confronting
and seeking to address the gender contradication in our society. Even
the minimal educational opportunities available to women worker leaders,
they are mainly in the mould of neo-liberal training and education.
It will strive to serve and promote the social, economic,
political, ideological and cultural interests of the working class and
the poor. In doing this it will also embark on strategic studies, policy
analysis and advocacy on policies and working class driven programmes
for socio-economic transformation. It should also embark on activities
aimed at improving opportunities for meaningful economic empowerment of
the working class and the poor through promoting the economic and developmental
interests, social and political awareness of these sectors of society,
including literacy and other working class and community education activities
The institute will also network and link up with relevant
similar organisations sharing similar goals in South Africa and globally,
with particular emphasis on the African continent and the South in general.
To this end the Institute will soon be signing a historic Memorandum of
Understanding and undertaking joint projects with the German-based Rosa
Luxembourg Foundation linked to the German Party of Democratic Socialism.
The projects will be announced at the launch of the Institute.
That the Institute is a joint initiative of the SACP and
COSATU, does not mean that it will be an extension nor a mouthpiece of
these organisations. Instead it will be an autonomous institution, free
to critically reflect on policies and programmes of the SACP, COSATU and
other working class formations. It will also embark on its own independent
programmes and projects and seek to forge links with other similar bodies.
In our conception, the Institute will not seek to replace
or compete with other existing specialised institutions and NGOs serving
the interests of the working class in their respective specialisations,
like Ditsela, NALEDI, NIEP, CEPD, etc. Instead it will seek to co-operate,
relate to and harness work done in such bodies towards the overall strategic
interests of the working class.
The Chris Hani Memorial Seminar
As part of the 10th anniversary commemoration the
SACP will convene hold a Chris Hani Memorial Seminar, which will be replicated
in all the provinces, to reflect on the life, struggles and sacrifices
of Cde Chris. It will be held under the theme of "Chris Hani - an
embodiment of the relationship between the national democratic revolution
and socialism. The aim of the seminar will be to take forward internal
alliance debates around the concrete linkages between the NDR and socialism
under current conditions, as our conception of a transition to socialism
in South Africa. The seminar will also critically reflect on the content
of the national, class and gender contradictions in the current period.
This will form part of our ongoing contribution to deepen debates and
engagement in our alliance, and to have no-holds barred debate on some
of the critical questions facing the South African revolution. This is
what Chris stood for and this is what we must continue to do to celebrate
the life and times of this hero of our revolution.
We miss you Tshonyane!
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