Pamphlet of the Industrial
Workers of Africa
Johannesburg, 1918
1.
This Native
Council is for all those who call themselves Country Workers. Black
African open your eyes, the time has come for you all who call themselves
Country Workers that you should join and become members of your own
Council. It is not to say that we workers stop you from joining any
other Councils, but you must know what you are in the Country or (rich
or poor). All workers are poor therefore they should have their own
Council.
2.
Item
1: Friend are you not a worker?
Item
2: Is it not true that we Black People do every work in the country?
Item
3: If so why do you not become a member of the Industrial Workers
of Africa?
Item
4: Why should all workers be pressed down by the rich where they
all do the work of the Country?
Item
5: Why should you be kicked and spat at whilst working.
Item
6: How is it that you black workers asking for bread from the
Government as their children, are arrested and sent to gaol?
Item
7: 0! Oh! Workers your children died in German East Africa and
West. Others were drowned in the sea. Upon that you are still burdened
and compelled to carry 100 (hundred) Passes in your father's country.
Item
8: Workers come together and be united and join your own Native
Council. Why are you afraid to become members of the Industrial Workers
of Africa whilst you call yourself Workers?
Send your
news and your addresses to: T.W. THIBEDI
P.O. Box 2972
JOHANNESBURG
Source:
Baruch Hirson, 1988, "David Ivon Jones: the early writings on socialism
in South Africa",
in Searchlight South Africa, volume 1, number 1, p. 107.