Amathole Regional conference of the ANC Youth League is taking place tomorrow 
(8:30 registration of delegates) at Walter Sisulu University, Berlin Campus. 
What suprise us is the letter to the branches, which stipulates that no 
complaints will be accepted, while there is no response from the office of SG. 
What also suprising its to find parrallel structures and the question is how SG 
will respond on that without the concerned branches. There is also delegates 
who are 41 years old, and again no complaints will be attended to. Comrades 
please advise the NEC, SG before this conference, otherwise it will be bad. 
They are doing this purposely. The Progressive proposed Top 5 is:
 
1. Sithembela Zuka, who is a Provincial Chairperson of YCL as the Chairperson
2. Sithembele Ncethezo -Deputy Chair
3. Lunga Khumelwano, who is a District committee member of YCL as the Secretary
4. Lwandlekazi Mapekula -Deputy Secretary
5. Viwe Sidali -Treasurer

--- On Thu, 3/25/10, DomzaNet <[email protected]> wrote:


From: DomzaNet <[email protected]>
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] [Communist University] No Woman, No Revolution
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, March 25, 2010, 8:56 PM






No Woman, No Revolution: General Introduction




















We meet in the UJ Doornfontein Library. The next session will be as follows: 


Date: 8 April (Thursday)
Time: 17h00 sharp to 18h30 sharp
Venue: The Library, University of Johannesburg, 37 Nind Street, Doornfontein, 
Johannesburg (former Technikon Witwatersrand). Cars enter from the slip road to 
the left of the bridge on Siemert Road.
Topic: The Social Basis of the Woman Question.













We have completed the “Basics” series. The new series, starting in Doornfontein 
on 8 April 2010, called “No Woman, No Revolution”, is motivated by the 
inconceivableness of a successful revolution that mobilised only half of the 
available support. Clearly, the women must be as fully involved as the men, or 
there will be no revolution. 


This series is designed to problematise the question of women in South Africa’s 
specific conditions in 2010.


The series follows a roughly chronological sequence, beginning with Alexandra 
Kollontai one hundred and one years ago in 1909, followed by Lenin and the 
Third Comintern Congress. From there it jumps to the 1950s, the high point of 
women’s organisation in South Africa; and then to the post-1994 situation, with 
comment on the ANCWL and the Progressive Women’s Movement (PWM).


The series then doubles back to pick up some theoretical weight from Angela 
Davis and Evelyn Reed, finally ending up with a compilation of Umsebenzi Online 
articles on women between 2006 and 2009.


The argument that runs through this course is that to enrol the women into the 
revolution, the revolutionaries need the same kinds of mass structures that 
have been organised by and for the working class, such as trade unions.


But the women of South Africa have been influenced by those who have been 
selling an idea, not shared, for example, by Evelyn Reed or by Ray Alexander, 
that formal organisation is odiously masculine or patriarchal in nature. Among 
the women, some have been able to demobilise their sisters with this mistaken 
idea. We will follow up on this question.


There is not a great deal of suitable Political Education material about women. 
In this series of ten, we will mostly have just one text to read for each 
session.


The available narrative in relation to South African women’s organisations, and 
relative lack of organisations, is not very clear, especially since 1990. One 
finds that the academic work that could have been done has not actually been 
done in all cases.


One exception is Meera Nanda’s Postmodernism, Hindu nationalism, and Vedic 
science (2004). Although it is not about South Africa, this fine essay does 
cover matters that are crucial to the understanding of South African politics 
in general and to the question of women in South Africa in particular. It is 
particularly helpful in respect of the philosophical reversal that happened in 
India and in South Africa whereby humanism was sometimes abandoned and 
irrational post-modernism took its place. It is because of this kind of 
reversal of reason and science that it is possible to conceive of something so 
peculiarly irrational that it can be called “organic – not a formal structure”.


We will return to this question, too.


The specific introduction for the first session will follow in a day or so. The 
text will be Alexandra Kollontai’s “The Social Basis of the Woman Question”.



--
Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 3/25/2010 08:56:00 PM 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .
 
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
yclsa-eom-forum+unsubscribegooglegroups.com or reply to this email with the 
words "REMOVE ME" as the subject.



      

-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
yclsa-eom-forum+unsubscribegooglegroups.com or reply to this email with the 
words "REMOVE ME" as the subject.

Reply via email to