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The National Flag of the liberation struggle



June 26th: South Africa Freedom Day



Part 2



Margaret Bourke White, 'Communist Meeting'



“Communist meeting, Johannesburg, South Africa, 1950.”

Margaret Bourke-White, Life Magazine
<http://johnedwinmason.typepad.com/john_edwin_mason_photogra/2012/08/margare
t-bourke-white-south-africa-p2.html>



June 26th 1950:



The Stayaway





June 26th 1950 sums up a whole period, that began in 1946, when:



“on August 12, 1946, the African mine workers of the Witwatersrand came out
on strike in support of a demand for higher wages ‐ 10 shillings a day.
They continued the strike for a week in the face of the most savage police
terror, in which officially 1,248 workers were wounded and a very large
number ‐ officially only 9 ‐ were killed.” (M P Naicker, ANC Director of
Publicity, 1976).



Naicker concluded:



“The brave miners of 1946 gave birth to the ANC Youth League's Programme of
Action adopted in 1949; they were the forerunners of the freedom strikers of
May 1, 1950, against the Suppression of Communism Act, and the tens of
thousands who joined the 26 June nation‐wide protest strike that followed
the killing of sixteen people during the May Day strike. They gave the
impetus for the 1952 Campaign of Defiance of Unjust Laws when thousands of
African, Indian and Coloured people went to jail.”



The following year, on March 9, 1947, Drs Dadoo, Xuma and G M (Monty)
Naicker, signed the Joint Declaration of Cooperation, that has ever since
been known as “The Doctors’ Pact”, between the ANC and the two Indian
congresses (Natal and Transvaal). This was another precursor of the 1950
stayaway, but more especially of the 1952 Defiance Campaign, and then of the
Congress of all kinds of South African people in support of the Freedom
Charter adopted on June 26th, 1955.



In June, 1948 the National Party came to power in South Africa, following a
General Election among the white minority rulers of the country.



In March, 1950 a 'Defend Free Speech' Convention was called in Johannesburg
by the ANC (Transvaal) the Transvaal Indian Congress, the African People's
Organisation and the Johannesburg District of the Communist Party. Under the
chairmanship of ANC President Dr. Moroka the conference adopted a militant
series of demands for freedom of speech, movement and organisation, for land
and the ending of colour bars. It issued a call for a one-day general strike
and stayaway on the first of May, 1950.



“The strike was an outstanding success” wrote Michael Harmel, author of
“Fifty Fighting Years”.



However, in the evening of the day the police went on the rampage. They
killed 18 people on the East Rand and in Alexandra Township. In response,
the ANC called an emergency conference in Johannesburg. Attended by
representatives of the executives of the South African Indian Congress, the
APO and the Communist Party, the conference heard an analysis of the
Suppression of Communism Bill, published just after the May 1 stayaway.



The conference resolved on mass action, in protest against the law to
suppress the Communist Party and other undemocratic measures. 26 June 1950
was set aside as a day of mourning for those killed by the police on 1 May,
a day of nationwide strikes and protests. A joint committee was established
to implement the decision.



“The campaign that followed, and the massive response from all parts of the
country, marked a milestone in the development of the unity in action of the
national liberation movements of the oppressed peoples, together with the
revolutionary working class movement, the 'Congress Alliance'.” (Michael
Harmel, Fifty Fighting years).



O R Tambo later wrote:



“On June 26, 1950, South Africa came to a standstill as hundreds of
thousands of workers and people demonstrated their determination to meet the
violence of the oppressors with militant struggle for liberation... We
demanded as we still demand ‘tokologo ka nako ya rona,’ for our people
have set themselves the goal of complete freedom.”



In 1953, Chief Luthuli wrote:



“Ever since 1950, June 26 has become a special day in the calendar of the
African people of South Africa. Unlike the other days, which are usually
singled out for special marking in the South African calendars, this day has
not been fixed as a statutory holiday by the white Parliament of the
country.”



The second stayaway strike - June 26th 1950 - had been a success.



But notably, this was a day that was not received from others, but one that
was wholly nominated by the people’s movement in the time of its great
gathering-together as a united force, in defiance of the race laws of the
day, and as a Congress Alliance. It was deliberate.



Umrabulo, 1st Quarter 2003, summed it up like this:



“These were the first steps in the implementation of the Programme of
Action which converted the ANC into an effective mass political organisation
enjoying the loyalty and support of millions of people throughout the
country. The 26 June Day of Protest laid the foundations for the joint
action of the Congresses which ultimately consolidated itself in the
'Congress Alliance' whose initiatives dominated the political scene in the
1950s.”





umrabulo















































































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