National Democratic Revolution, Part 7
Pondoland Revolt, taken by Eli Weinberg
Peasants’
Revolt
The National Democratic
Revolution is based upon a clear understanding of objective, dynamic class
politics. It proceeds from a class alliance against the oppressor class,
towards the fullest possible democracy.
There is an interrelationship
between the underlying (objective) class realities and the subjective
(conscious) organisational politics of democracy. In these posts, we have
tended either to concentrate upon one side of this dialectical relationship, or
the other.
The previous two parts of
this series have been about the deliberate organisation and mobilisation of the
NDR in the 1940s and 1950s. This part is more about objective class realities,
or in other words, about Political Economy. The next part will be about
organised politics again, and then the final two parts will be of a more
synthetic nature, dealing with both subject and object together.
Looking forward, the last
revolutionary confrontation is bound to be between the big bourgeoisie and its
gravedigger, the proletariat that it must constantly bring into being. Yet it
is far from the case that in the present time all other classes have died out
in South Africa. For success, these other, relatively minor classes should
be allies of the proletariat in the National Democratic Revolution.
Class alliance is essential
for the isolation and defeat of the oppressor, so as to deny the oppressor the
comfort of support, and to prevent the oppressor from isolating and defeating
the working class. The politics of class alliance were practiced in Karl Marx’s
time and before that, in the Great French Revolution. Class alliances were
again crucial in the Russian and the Chinese Revolutions, to name but two out
of many. The hammer-and-sickle emblem of the SACP, first used during the
Russian Revolution of 1917, signifies class alliance between workers and
peasants.
In order for a class alliance
to be possible, the working class must be class conscious, and so must the
other classes be. The latter often need to be assisted by the working class and
by the intellectual partisans of the working class, the Communist Party. Yet
there is rather little in the way of class-conscious literature about South
Africa’s large petty-bourgeois class, who are for the most part very poor
people, and little of a directly political nature about the agricultural
petty-bourgeoisie, who are the peasantry, or about the oppressors of the rural
petty-bourgeoisie and peasantry, who are South Africa’s bureaucratised feudal
class.
Govan Mbeki
The classic exception to this
intellectual famine is communist journalist and Rivonia trialist Govan Mbeki’s
[pictured] “Peasants’
Revolt”, published in 1964 (see the link below). Other works such as “Landmarked”,
by Cherryl Walker (Jacana, 2008) tell us that the huge misery of rural
displacement and impoverishment has still not been ameliorated nor turned in a
sufficiently positive direction.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: The Peasants' Revolt, C8, Chiefs in the Saddle,
Govan Mbeki.
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