mk_masthead.jpg

 

 

In celebration of the lives of 

 

Malume Kotane

 

and

 

Uncle JB Marks

 

 

Nathi Mthethwa, ANC Today, Johannesburg, 27 February 2015

 

The occasion to celebrate the lives of the South African liberation struggle
stalwarts, Moses Kotane and John Beaver (J.B.) Marks, offers us an
opportunity to reflect on the common histories shared by the peoples of
Russia and South Africa.

 

As we march towards the end of the celebrations of twenty years of South
Africa's freedom and democracy, it is important to acknowledge the pivotal
role that the international community played in support of our struggle for
liberation. Russia or the Soviet Union, as it was called at the time, was
always a reliable companion of the South African liberation movement at
different stages of our struggle. They did not only pledge solidarity with
our cause, they also occupied the frontline trenches in the South African
anticolonial and anti-apartheid struggles.

 

If we were to give a title to this address, I would call it "Sharing Common
Histories; Inventing Our Future." I would say so because both Kotane and
Marks are prominent figures in the history of the relations between Russia
and South Africa. Their life stories are intertwined with the rich history
of the relations between these two countries, thus laying a solid foundation
for a common future.

 

When the African National Congress (ANC), which is the ruling party in South
Africa today, was listed as a terrorist group by many countries, it was the
Soviet Union that supported our struggle unequivocally, offering education
opportunities to political activists, providing military training to ANC
cadres and financial support to the liberation movement. The ANC
representatives even held a diplomatic status in Russia while many countries
were turning their backs on us.

 

The early pioneers of the South African liberation struggle initiated
contact with Moscow as far back as 1927, when one of the founding fathers of
the African National Congress (ANC), Josiah Gumede, visited the USSR with a
view to establishing relations. The ANC had only been in existence for about
fifteen years and was overly optimistic that through political persuasion,
the colonial government would ease the yoke of oppression on the indigenous
people of South Africa. 

 

The USSR was always known for producing some of the most renowned scholars
and philosophers in the world, thus becoming one of the most desirable
destinations for knowledge and information. It was against this backdrop
that in the early 1930s, our forebears in the national liberation movement
who were also members of the South African Communist Party (SACP), came to
Russia to study the science of socialism. This pioneering group of cadres
was comprised of key figures that were to play a prominent role in the
national liberation movement, including the likes of Albert Nzula, J.B.
Marks, Moses Kotane and others.

 

In fact, these three icons of our struggle were later to be buried in the
Russian soil. Kotane was an active member and the longest serving Secretary
General of the South African Communist Party (SACP), served as the Treasurer
General of the ANC, and was a key figure in the formation of a progressive
trade union movement in South Africa. He was sent to Russia for medical
attention after being struck by a severe stroke in 1968, and succumbed to
death in 1978.

 

Similarly, Marks had been a trade unionist, the President of African Mine
Workers Union, which later changed to be the National Union of Mine Workers
and the President of the Transvaal province of the ANC. He was a key figure
in the Defiance Campaign and, like Kotane, he was banned under the
Suppression of Communism Act. He went to Russia to receive medical attention
in 1971, and suffered a fatal heart attack in 1972.

 

These two legends played a paramount role in solidifying relations between
the ANC, SACP and the South African Congress of Trade Unions, which was
later to be transformed to become the Congress of South African Trade Unions
(COSATU), whose alliance exists up to this day. Kotane and Marks are
embodiments of the revolutionary alliance in South Africa. No other two
individuals personify this alliance better than these two esteemed leaders.
Highly principled, they lived the values, the ethics, and the essence of
what this alliance was, and continues to be.

 

We will recall that the liberation movement in South Africa began in a
peaceful and non-violent manner for almost five decades of its existence.
The apartheid government had turned a deaf ear to negotiations and the
passive resistance proved ineffective while the brutal killing of unarmed
protesters continued. After the introduction of apartheid as a government
system in 1948, followed by more vicious laws and continued carnage of
innocent victims, the national liberation movement was forced to take the
struggle to a different level - to embark on armed struggle.

 

When the time came for the national liberation movement to seek support from
international partners, Moscow was one of the first partners to be
identified. A delegation comprised of Moses Kotane, Yusuf Dadoo and other
representatives of the SACP came to Moscow to discuss support for the
liberation struggle in South Africa. The Soviet Union offered more than just
monetary support and military training. They provided substantial
humanitarian support, which included food supplies, clothes, music
instruments, and vehicles. The Russian support to our cause was
unconditional.

 

The Soviet Union was also one of the first alliances we looked up to for the
training of the ANC cadres. Subsequent to the unwavering support of the
Soviet Union and other parties, Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), the military wing of
the ANC, was formed in 1961. Between 1963 and 1965, over 300 ANC cadres had
received military training in Russia.

 

After the maiming of young people during the student uprisings in 1976,
followed by the killing of Steve Biko in police custody a year later, the
ANC saw the need to intensify its armed struggle. In 1978, President O.R.
Tambo led a delegation to the USSR where he requested assistance in the
organisation of MK cadres in Angola.

 

At this stage, there were hundreds of MK cadres who had received intensive
military training, guerrilla warfare and other methods of military
confrontation, which the cadres of our movement engaged in and executed in
their confrontation of apartheid operatives.

 

Malume Kotane and uncle JB, as they were affectionately known, were the
living examples of the successful implementation of the four pillars of our
revolution. The first one, Mass Mobilisation, they excelled in it through
their involvement in mass action in the country and involving the array of
motive forces of workers, youth, women, intelligentsia, et al.

 

The second pillar of our revolution, which the Underground Movement, they
were the pioneers of this terrain of struggle. They mastered this terrain
through building and consolidating underground work as a potent force for
change.

 

On the third pillar, which is Armed Resistance, they ensured that many
cadres of our movement received intensive military training and effectively
used this pillar to overthrow a system which was dubbed by the United
Nations as a "Crime against Humanity."

 

The fourth pillar, the International Solidarity Movement, Kotane and Marks
passed this test with flying colours. They mobilised the entire world to
rally behind the liberation movement in South Africa against this
colonialism of a special type.

 

Through the universal execution of the four pillars of our struggle as
alluded to above, the South African government was forced to come to the
negotiation table, thanks to the tireless efforts by Kotane, Marks and their
generation who laid a firm foundation for our liberation.

 

This resulted in the first democratic elections held in 1994, which the ANC,
under the leadership of the late President Nelson Mandela, won with a
resounding victory.

 

It was natural for the enduring cordial relationship between the ANC and
Russia to continue in the post-apartheid stage. During his state visit in
1999, President Mandela expressed his gratitude for the "solidarity of the
Russian people in the South African fight against apartheid for freedom."
This visit by the President of the Republic of South Africa consolidated the
bilateral relations between the two countries and laid the foundation for a
different kind of relationship, where trade and investment would prosper.

 

After two decades of the democratic dispensation in South Africa, it is
important that we acknowledge and cherish the role of these selfless
revolutionaries in the attainment of the freedom and democracy that we enjoy
today. As part of celebrating the unfolding culture of democracy in our
country, we reclaim the fragments of our heritage that have been scattered
in different parts of the world. It is in this context that we are returning
the mortal remains of Marks and Kotane to their ancestral land.

 

Throughout our struggle history, Kotane and Marks continued to shine bright
as symbols of unity of purpose between the two countries. I can assure you
that the repatriation of their mortal remains would not be the end of the
bond that ties South Africa and Russia. Instead, it will serve as the
reminder of the common histories that are shared between the peoples of the
two countries. This moment will be engraved in our collective consciousness
as the people of South Africa. I am confident that they are smiling down at
us - proud that we have finally attained the free and democratic society
that they both fearlessly fought for.

 

To us as the government of the Republic of South Africa, the return of the
mortal remains of Moses Kotane and J.B. Marks is an acknowledgement of the
role that our international partners played in contributing to our struggle
for liberation. It is also an affirmation of continued cordial relations as
we take our nations forward. We are cultivating our collective futures while
celebrating our common histories.

 

There may be potholes, detours and hurdles along the way, but the challenges
that we face today are not insurmountable and cannot match the blight of
slavery, colonialism and apartheid over which we have triumphed. Marks and
Kotane's lives were sacrificed in order to create a better South Africa and
contribute to a better and safer Africa and a just world order.

 

We dare not fail them!

 

 

.    Nathi Mthethwa is a member of the ANC NEC and Minister of Arts and
Culture

 

 

From: http://www.anc.org.za/docs/anctoday/2015/at07.htm#art2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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