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Date
: 02/08/2004
Source: The Presidency
Title: J Zuma: Matthew Goniwe Annual Lecture
ADDRESS BY DEPUTY PRESIDENT, JACOB ZUMA, AT THE SECOND MATTHEW
GONIWE ANNUAL LECTURE, ON THE OCCASION OF THE ALBERT LUTHULI
MEMORIAL LECTURE WEEK, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2
August 2004
Honourable Premier of Gauteng, Mbhazima Shilowa,
Vice-Chancellor of Wits University, Professor Loyiso Nongxa,
Dr Albertina Luthuli and other members of the Luthuli family
present,
Academics, SRC President and members,
Students,
Distinguished guests,
It is an honour and privilege for me to join you this evening, on
the occasion of the Second Matthew Goniwe Annual Lecture, which
focuses on the legacy of one of the noblest sons of our country and
continent, Chief AJ Luthuli.
We are today honouring an outstanding African intellectual, who
cherished and promoted the ideals of freedom, equality, peace,
justice and human rights for all.
We will always be proud of the fact that through this remarkable,
yet very humble man of the people, South Africa produced the first
Nobel Peace Prize Winner in December 1961, the first person to
receive this accolade in our country and continent.
His humility in accepting this honour, when he stated that he did
not believe he deserved it, gave an indication of the type of
leader he was, who did not view his contribution as worthy of
personal recognition.
Chief AJ Luthuli was born in 1898, near Bulawayo in Zimbabwe. After
the death of his father, who was a missionary in Bulawayo, he
returned to his ancestral home in Groutville, South Africa and
trained as a teacher. He left the teaching profession in 1936 after
being elected Chief of the Groutville Amakholwa community. His last
teaching post was at Emanzimtoti, Adams College, one of the early
centres of political conscientisation.
Long before joining the ANC in 1945, he had already begun
participation in ANC activities, attending meetings and was active
in other respects.
In 1946 he witnessed the mineworker's strike and police brutality
against the strikers. He was also inspired by the Indian Passive
Resistance Campaign of 1946, in which over 2000 people defied the
government's discriminatory laws and courted imprisonment.
As a teacher, traditional leader and successful farmer, he could
easily have turned his back on the struggle for freedom and led a
comfortable life. But, when pressured by the apartheid regime to
leave the ANC, he instead left the chieftainship and later assumed
the leadership of the ANC.
Distinguished guests, the strength of the ANC has always included
its clarity of vision and purpose, and the existence of clear
policies on all key questions in our country. Through his writings
and public statements, Chief Luthuli articulated these policies
eloquently, also ensuring implementation at various levels of the
movement, during very repressive conditions, assisted by his able
comrades at the time.
Chief Luthuli led the ANC during a period of turbulence and intense
repression from the apartheid regime. It was under his leadership
that the ANC entered what Former President Madiba calls the
"fighting fifties." The ANC had taken a decision to become more
militant in 1949, under the Presidency of Dr Alfred Xuma.
Under Chief Luthuli's leadership the ANC grew into a mass militant
organisation, and in line with its Programme of Action engaged in
mass action such as national "Stay at Home" campaigns, bus and
potato boycotts, economic boycott of Nationalist products, peasant
revolts, anti-pass campaigns, resistance to forced removals and
mass protest rallies and demonstrations.
This period also saw the Defiance Campaign, the struggle against
Bantu Education, the drawing together of all freedom-loving South
Africans across the racial line into the Congress Alliance and the
adoption of the Freedom Charter, the anti-pass campaign by women in
1956, and the launch of armed struggle in 1961.
In his address to the 42nd annual ANC conference in December 1953,
Chief Luthuli described the Defiance Campaign, as one of the "most
outstanding events in the political history of the Union of South
Africa."
He attributed a number of subsequent events as indicating the
impact of the campaign, including the holding of a short session of
the apartheid Parliament that produced the Public Safety Act and
the Criminal Laws Amendment Act.
Most importantly, the Defiance Campaign attracted the attention of
the world, and racial discrimination became an international
issue.
Under Chief Luthuli's leadership, the ANC also brought together
freedom-loving people of South Africa to put together minimum
demands in the form of the Freedom Charter, which was adopted in
Kliptown in 1955 at the Congress of the People.
At this Congress, the Isithwalandwe/Seaparankoe - the highest
honour awarded by the ANC - was awarded to Chief Luthuli, Yusuf
Dadoo and Father Trevor Huddleston. However, only Father Huddleston
was able to accept his award, as Chief Luthuli and Cde Dadoo were
unable to attend due to banning orders placed on them.
The adoption of the Freedom Charter by the Congress of the People
is an important milestone in the history of the ANC and of the
country and was recognised as such internationally.
In his message to the Congress of the People, Chief Luthuli
emphasised its significance as follows:
"Why will this assembly be significant and unique? Its size, I
hope, will make it unique. But above all its multi-racial nature
and its noble objectives will make it unique because it will be the
first time in the history of our multi-racial nation that its
people from all walks of life will meet as equals, irrespective of
race, colour and creed, to formulate a Freedom Charter for all
people in the country."
We must also emphasise that Chief Luthuli led by example, and this
is evidenced by the fact that when he led the people in the
Anti-Pass campaign in 1960, he was the first to burn his
passbook.
Another highlight of Chief Luthuli's leadership of the ANC is that
it was during this period that the armed struggle was
launched.
He clearly articulated this ANC policy in a statement issued on 12
June 1964, when Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu and six other leaders
were sentenced to life imprisonment in the Rivonia trial. It was
read at the United Nations Security Council meeting on the same day
by the representative of Morocco.
He said: "The African National Congress never abandoned its method
of a militant, non-violent struggle, and of creating in the process
a spirit of militancy in the people. However, in the face of the
uncompromising white refusal to abandon a policy which denies the
African and other oppressed South Africans their rightful heritage
- freedom - no one can blame brave just men for seeking justice by
the use of violent methods; nor could they be blamed if they tried
to create an organised force in order to ultimately establish peace
and racial harmony."
It should be remembered that in 1910, it was not the whole nation
that met to take a fundamental decision to establish the Union of
South Africa, out of four different administrations, which had been
called republics.
But it was only the two groups, the English and the Afrikaners who
decided on the Union, excluding the overwhelming majority of this
country. In a speech during Luthuli centenary celebrations in
kwaDukuza in April 1998, Madiba pointed out that this statement by
Chief Luthuli sustained them through the prison years.
Madiba said: "As he explained our resort to armed struggle in the
face of the uncompromising denial of freedom for the majority of
South Africans, he (Luthuli) evoked the vision of a peaceful,
united and just society which sustained our people through the long
years of struggle".
The intransigence of the apartheid regime had also necessitated
greater international solidarity and action. A decision was taken,
under Chief Luthuli's leadership, that Oliver Tambo should leave
the country to lead the ANC's international campaign. The
international campaign took many forms, including the call for
sanctions against South Africa.
Chief Luthuli, as the voice of the oppressed masses, clearly
communicated this policy. In the Rivonia Trial statement, he made a
strong call for sanctions, and called upon Britain and America to
take decisive action in this regard.
Chief Luthuli had also called for sanctions earlier in 1960, in an
article in New Age, reacting to a statement by British Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan who had objected to the call for
sanctions.
Chief Luthuli also clearly expressed the ANC position on
non-racialism, and it was during his leadership that the non-racial
Congress Alliance was established. While the Defiance Campaign was
organised by the ANC, it was also actively supported by the South
African Indian Congress.
This militancy of the Defiance Campaign created the conditions for
the organised participation of the Coloured People's Congress and
the Congress of Democrats, and shortly thereafter by the South
African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU) after its
establishment.
The Alliance, born out of the practical apartheid conditions,
brought together democrats and freedom lovers in common pursuit of
justice and freedom. Chief Luthuli's call for the unity of all the
oppressed people and progressive whites found resonance within the
Congress of the People campaign.
The ANC had always been clear on the type of society it wanted to
build after apartheid, as expressed in the Freedom Charter, and
Chief Luthuli as the head of the movement, outlined this policy in
many articles and public statements, that South Africa belonged to
all who live in it.
In an interview with Drum in June 1958, he emphasised the need for
the ANC to pursue co-operation with other racial groups, as the
"Africa for Africans" position was justifiable in territories where
other racial groups, especially whites, were not as permanently
settled as they were in South Africa or Zimbabwe.
The question of the participation of women in the liberation
struggle has always been a focal point within the ANC. In a message
to the 1959 congress of the ANC Women's League, Chief Luthuli
narrated the various campaigns led by women, and reaffirmed the
ANC's position on the critical role of women in the liberation
struggle.
The role of the working class in the struggle for liberation was
reflected in his favourite slogan that the ANC was the Shield, and
SACTU was the Spear of the nation.
Chief Luthuli's legacy will live on for years to come. His belief
in freedom, peace, equality of all and the right to human dignity
was a passion that drove him in his leadership of the ANC, and kept
him going throughout his period of persecution by the apartheid
regime.
His belief in the unity of all, both the oppressed as well as
democrats within the white community, promoted the ANC's position
on building a non-racial future, of a South Africa that belongs to
all who live in it, black and white.
The eventual attainment of liberation in 1994 was a fitting tribute
to Chief Luthuli and all who fought for the freedom of this
country.
If he could speak today, we believe that Chief Luthuli would say we
were correct in the manner in which we worked and achieved a smooth
transition from apartheid to democracy in 1994, in working for
unity, peace and reconciliation instead of retribution, and in
working so hard to ensure the improvement of the lives of the poor
and marginalised over the last 10 years.
We also believe he would say we are correct in our pursuit of peace
and stability within the African continent and in the world.
We recall his words when he received the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo,
where he said; "May the day come soon, when the peoples of the
world will rouse themselves, and together effectively stamp out any
threat to peace, in whatever quarter of the world it may be found.
When that day comes, there shall be peace on earth and goodwill
between men."
The message is as relevant today as it was in December 1961, and
summarises the legacy of Chief Luthuli, the man of peace, freedom,
justice, unity and equality for all.