SACPblackStar.jpg

 

South African Communist Party Central Committee Statement, 8 August 2014

 

 

Women's Day

 

 

Tomorrow 9 August 2014 is Women's Day. The SACP salutes the women of South
Africa and the world for the outstanding role they have played in the
struggle for freedom and social emancipation. The SACP calls on both women
and men to look at each other with mutual respect, and work together in the
shared struggle to uproot gender domination and move South Africa forward to
a non-exploitative socialist society. 

 

In South Africa at least since 1913 women have played a magnificent role in
our struggle. In that year women fought back through passive resistance and
refusal to carry passes. Among other outstanding leaders there was Charlotte
Maxeke, the first Black woman graduate in South Africa who was to become the
first President of the Bantu Women's League - since 1948 the African
National Congress Women's League (ANCWL). At that time, when the male
leadership was still engaged in cap-in-hand diplomacy, the women
co-ordinated further resistance culminating in early 1919 in a massive march
led by Maxeke. By 1922, the oppressive white minority South African
government had agreed not to extend pass laws to women.

 

Throughout the 1950s women waged gallant struggles against the apartheid
regime's return to pass laws for women and other increasingly repressive
laws that restricted freedom of movement and political rights. The SACP dips
the Red Banner in recognition of the heroic women who participated in and
led these struggles: Dora Tamana, Bertha Mashaba, Lilian Ngoyi, Helen
Joseph, Rahima Moosa, Albertina Sisulu, Sophie De Bruyn, and trade unionist
Frances Baard who was also involved in the drafting of the 'Freedom
Charter'. Throughout our struggle women played a major role, Josie Mpama,
Cissie Gool, Bettie Du Toit, Ray Alexander, Ruth First, Fatima Meer, Dorothy
Nyembe and countless more. Women also swelled the ranks of the people's army
uMkhonto we Sizwe and fought gallantly too in the armed trenches for the
freedom of their people.   

 

Since 1994 South Africa has made massive strides in social transformation,
clean water and sanitation, electrification, houses, education, have all
contributed positively to the improvement in the quality of life for women.
In the patriarchal relations that characterised South Africa, women
especially have been the ones who carried the responsibility of collecting
water and wood fuel and looking after households. We have also made progress
in terms of legislation and the participation of women in State
institutions, municipal councils, provincial legislatures, parliament and
the executives at all the three spheres of government, as well as in other
branches of the State.

 

The private sector however is lagging far behind and social attitudes
towards women, though they have improved, are still characterised
patriarchal stereotypes. Women, particularly black and working class who
historically suffered all the forms of oppression, class, racial and gender,
continue to be in the receiving end of capitalist exploitation, including
unfair social and labour practices. Temporary employment contracts and
labour brokering affect women more than men as does gender based violence.


 

The SACP calls upon our structures and the progressive movement as a whole
and our democratic government to lead efforts to rebuild a strong women's
movement particularly in the rural areas in order to anchor the second
radical phase of our transition within the primary rural motive force of our
revolution, the rural women.

 

The SACP says "Wathint' Abafazi Wathint' imbokodo, wena uzokufa"

 

 

Issued by the SACP

 

Enquiries:

National Spokesperson,

Alex Mashilo

Mobile: 082 9200 308

Email: [email protected] 

Website: www.sacp.org.za 

Twitter: @2SACP

 

 

 

 

 

 

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