"Fight for Africa,
which you deserve":
The Industrial
Workers of Africa in South Africa, 1917-1921
JOHANNESBURG,
South Africa. May 1918. A group of African workers, and a handful of
white radicals, meet in a small room behind a general store on the corner
of Fox and McLaren streets, as they have done on a weekly basis for
over a year. Several new faces are present, so Rueben Cetiwe, a key
African militant, outlines the purpose of the gathering:
"We
are here for Organisation, so that as soon as all of your fellow workers
are organised, then we can see what we can do to abolish the Capitalist
system. We are here for the salvation of the workers. We are here to
organise and to fight for our rights and benefits."
This
is a gathering of the Industrial Workers of Africa, a revolutionary
syndicalist union that aims to organise the black workers who bear the
brunt of capitalist exploitation in South Africa.
Since
the country's industrial revolution began in the wake of diamond and
gold discoveries in the 1860s and 1880s, hundreds of thousands of workers
from Australia, America, Europe and southern Africa have been drawn
to the mines and surrounding industries that spring up almost overnight.
For
the white workers drawn to the mines and cities of the vast new Witwatersrand
complex from across the world, it is worth risking endemic silicosis
for unmatched wages for skilled men. For poor white Afrikaners, the
mines offer employment as share- cropping and family farming disintegrate
in the wake of war and landlordism.
For
Africans, the mines offer the wages needed to pay the tax collectors
in the British and Portuguese colonies. These workers enter the cities
as a conquered people, their lands under imperial authority, their chiefs
colluding in labour recruitment to the mines. Weighed down with indentures,
forbidden to organise unions, locked in all-male compounds on the mines,
or segregated in grim ghettos in the interstices of the towns, their
movement controlled by the internal passport, or "pass law" system that
affects every black working man, their families forced to stay in the
countryside: these men are the bed rock of South African capitalism.
By
1913, there are nearly 40,000 white workers, and around 240,000 African
workers on the Witwatersrand. And ruling them all: the "Randlords,"
the millionaire mine owners, and their allies, the rural landlords.
There
is resistance, however. In 1907, the white miners strike, but are driven
back to work after scabs are brought in. In 1913, a general strike by
white miners (joined by sections of the African labour force) succeeds
in forcing the Randlords to the negotiating table (but not before imperial
dragoons gun down 30 workers in downtown Johannesburg outside the Randlord's
"Rand Club"). A second general strike in 1914 is suppressed through
martial law.
The
African workers also rise. In 1902, as the Anglo-Boer war ends, there
is a labour shortage as Africans refuse to come to the mines. There
are also a series of strikes, but these are suppressed. In 1913, African
workers on the mines strike in the wake of the white miners' strike
- but their strike is put down by troops.
Then,
in mid-1917, a notice appears in Johannesburg, calling a meeting on
the 19 July 1917 to "discuss matters of common interest between white
and native workers". It is issued by the International Socialist League,
a revolutionary syndicalist organisation influenced by the IWW and formed
in 1915 in opposition to the First World War, and the racist and conservative
policies of the all-white South African Labour Party and the craft unions
supporting it.
Initially
rooted amongst white labour militants, the International Socialist League
is orientated from the start towards black workers. The League argues
in its weekly paper, the International, for a "new movement" to found
One Big Union that would overcome the "bounds of Craft and race and
sex," "recognise no bounds of craft, no exclusions of colour," and destroy
capitalism through a "lockout of the capitalist class."
From
1917 onwards, the International Socialist League begins to organise
amongst workers of colour. In March 1917, it founds an Indian Workers
Industrial Union in the port city of Durban; in 1918, it founds a Clothing
Workers Industrial Union (later spreading to Johannesburg) and horse
drivers' union in the diamond mining town of Kimberly; in Cape Town,
a sister organisation, the Industrial Socialist League, founds the Sweet
and Jam Workers Industrial Union that same year.
The
meeting of 19 July 1917 is a success, and forms the basis for weekly
study group meetings: led by International Socialists (notably Andrew
Dunbar, founder of the IWW in South Africa in 1910), these meetings
discuss capitalism, class struggle and the need for African workers
to unionise in order to win higher wages and remove the pass system.
On
the 27 September 1917, the study groups are transformed into a union,
the Industrial Workers of Africa, modeled on the IWW and organised by
an all-African committee. The new general union's demands are simple,
uncompromising, summed up in the its slogan - "Sifuna Zonke!" ("We want
everything!").
It
is the first trade union for African workers ever formed in South Africa.
The influence of the new union is widespread, although it numbers under
two hundred people at this point.
After
meeting the Industrial Workers, Talbot Williams of the nationalist African
Peoples Organisation makes a speech (reissued as a pamphlet complete
with the IWW preamble) calling for "the organisation of black labour,
upon which the whole commercial and mining industry rests today."
In
May 1918, Industrial Workers like T.W. Thibedi speak at an International
Socialist League May Day rally, the first May day directed primarily
towards workers of colour.
Within
the main nationalist body on the Witwatersrand, the petty bourgeois-dominated
Transvaal Native Congress, key Industrial Worker militants such as Cetiwe
and Hamilton Kraai form part of a left, pro-labour, bloc that helps
shift this sleepy organisation to the left in 1918 as an unprecedented
wave of strikes by black and white workers begins to engulf the country.
After
a Judge McFie - "a bear on the bench," in the words of the International
- jails 152 striking African municipal workers in June 1918, the Transvaal
Native Congress calls a mass rally of African workers in Johannesburg
on the 10 June. Industrial Workers present call for a general strike,
and an organising committee of International Socialists, Industrial
Workers and Congressmen is established to take the process forward.
A
week later the committee reports back: "the capitalists and workers
are at war everywhere in every country," so workers should "strike and
get what they should." On the 2 July, there will be general strike by
African workers: for a 1 shilling a day pay raise and "for Africa which
they deserved."
But
weak organisation - and perhaps nerves and inexperience - lead the committee
to call off the strike (although several thousand miners do not get
the message and come out anyway).
Government
does not forget, though, and arrests and charges eight activists - three
from the International Socialists, three from the Industrial Workers,
and two from Congress - for "incitement to public violence." The trial
is a forerunner of the Treason Trials of the 1950s: it is the first
time white and black activists are jointly charged for political activities
in South Africa.
The
case falls through for lack of evidence but Kraai and Cetiwe are among
those who lose their jobs as a result of the trial. Both are central
to a Native Congress-sponsored campaign against the pass laws, launched
in March 1919.
When
the conservatives in Congress call this struggle off in July, the two
comrades move to Cape Town to establish an Industrial Workers branch,
leaving Thibedi in charge of the Industrial Workers in Johannesburg.
Organising amongst dockworkers, the syndicalist militants helped organise
a joint strike by the Industrial Workers of Africa and two local unions,
the Industrial and Commercial Union and the (white) National Union of
Railways and Harbour Servants.
Supported
by the Industrial Socialist League, the strike by more than 2000 workers
demands better wages and opposes food exports, which many workers believe
is contributing to the country's high post-war inflation rate.
Although
the strike does not win, it helps lay a basis for cooperation on the
docks, and some years later, the Industrial Workers of Africa, the Industrial
and Commercial Union and several other black unions merge to form the
Industrial and Commercial Workers Union, or ICU.
Not
a syndicalist union - the ICU is influenced more by nationalist and
traditionalist ideologies than anti-capitalism, and is run from above
by a parasitic layer of petty bourgeois officials- the ICU still retains
some syndicalist colouring during its dramatic rise and fall in the
1920s. This colouring includes the goal of One Big Union, and a constitution
calling for "workers through their industrial organisations [to] take
from the capitalist class the means of production, to be owned and controlled
by the workers for the benefit of all, instead of for the profit of
a few."
This
must be reckoned part of the legacy of the Industrial Workers of Africa,
a revolutionary syndicalist union fighting capitalism and racism in
the heart of capitalist South Africa, at the height of colonialism in
Africa.
In
its "glorious period," between the 1880s and 1930s, revolutionary syndicalism
was not just an international movement - it was also internationalist
and anti-racist.
by
Lucien van der Walt
Bulletin
of the Kate Sharpley Library number 24