National Democratic Revolution, Part 3a
Socialism and Nationalism
Jack Simons and Ray Alexander
(they married in 1941) were two of the greatest communists South Africa has
ever produced.
Ray Alexander’s record as a
trade union organiser was second to none. Her record as a founder of the
Federation of South African Women is still the benchmark.
Jack Simons was a great
scholar, from humble beginnings, and a great teacher. Jack Simons is the
benchmark in political education. Samples of his contribution in this regard
can be found in the book “Comrade Jack -
The Political Lectures and Diary of Jack Simons, Nova Catengue”, STE
Publishers and the ANC, December 2001.
The Simons’ most outstanding
joint work is “Class and Colour in South
Africa, 1850-1950”, published when they were in exile (from which they
both lived to return in 1990). Click on the title to access the full book on
the ANC web site.
In this series on the NDR,
the main post for this week was the selection from “African Communists Speak” (1981), a book full of verbatim
documents. Our selection included the “Black Republic Thesis”, and Moses
Kotane’s “Cradock Letter”.
“Class and Colour” is a
narrative, with footnotes indicating sources. Many people are named. “Jones” is
David Ivon Jones, and “Andrews” is Bill Andrews. Other names will be more
familiar.
This chapter covers the
decade following the 1914-1918 inter-Imperialist war (The Great War).
This was the formative period
of the Communist Party of South Africa, the African National Congress, and the
black trade union movement; and the course was set from that time which
continues in the form of the National Democratic Revolutionary Alliance that
still exists today.
Illustration: Cover of “Comrade
Jack”, a book that includes political lectures Jack Simons gave in Angola.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Class
and Colour, C10, Socialism and Nationalism, Simons and Simons.
No comments:
Post a Comment