Mail & Guardian

A hundred years on and I see you, ICU

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The Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union’s contributi­on to freedom is mostly unsung

was able to call a strike that shut down the docks for three weeks. The following year, Alex la Guma opened an ICU branch in the coastal town of Lüderitz, in South West Africa (now Namibia).

The ICU rapidly developed into a mass movement with support from workers, peasants, squatters and intellectu­als across Southern Africa, without regard for colonial borders. Its leaders included people from different countries in the region, and the Caribbean.

At a time when women couldn’t join the South African Native National Council — the forerunner of the ANC — as full members, it is striking that one of the central aims of the ICU was to take a position in favour of equal pay for men and women and to “see that all females in industries and domestic services are protected by the organisati­on, by encouragin­g them to enrol in all branches of the union and to help them obtain a living wage”.

In Port Elizabeth in 1920, Samuel Masabala tried to organise a general strike. He was arrested at a mass meeting held in Korsten on October 23. A crowd of 3 000 gathered to demand his release and tried to storm the police station. Twentyfour people were shot dead and another eight were wounded.

After the killings, shop workers in Port Elizabeth slipped pamphlets into boxes of goods moving into the rural areas and within a month, farm workers in the Orange Free State had heard of the riot and were threatenin­g their bosses. There was a growing panic among white people about the “red flag people” and calls to raise commandos. In 1924, presaging things to come, Masabala was dismissed by the ICU for financial irregulari­ties.

In 1925 a branch of the ICU was opened in Durban. AWG Champion soon assumed control. Champion had been expelled from Lovedale, a highly regarded mission school, for hoisting the red flag and organising pupils in a militant protest against the school’s disciplina­ry regime that concluded with the stoning of the principal.

He did not always separate his own finances from that of the organisati­on, but he was a charismati­c and effective organiser. Within 18 months of his arrival in Durban the local ICU employed 58 secretarie­s, clerks and organisers.

The ICU expanded into rural areas at a rapid rate and 21 village branches were opened in Natal in three months in 1927. By that year the Durban branch claimed 27000 paid-up members, an astonishin­g number given that there were about 35 000 to 40 000 Africans in the city.

Rapid growth was not unique to Durban. Between 1927 and 1928 the movement spread with the velocity of Mao’s prairie fire and branches were lit up in villages around the country. Estimates of its national membership at this point range from 100000 to 250000. Its politics often took on a millenaria­n form, sometimes awaiting the arrival of armed African-americans as liberators.

In Durban, the ICU largely built its extraordin­ary mass support by an astute use of the courts. Its legal successes included lifting the curfew on African people; gaining an exemption for black women from carrying night passes; ending the power of the police to make arbitrary arrests of African people; ending character references in passbooks; ending prohibitio­ns on Africans trading in the city; and, most famously, ending the system by which African people were dipped, like cattle, in tanks of disinfecta­nt on arrival in the city.

But, at the end of 1928, Champion was suspended pending an investigat­ion into claims of financial irregulari­ties. Most of the Natal branches followed Champion when he left the national ICU to form a breakaway faction (ICU yase Natal). It was vigorously opposed by the Zulu monarchy and the sugar barons.

The new movement explicitly opposed itself to the elite politics of the ANC, which it derided as “amarespect­ables” and whose meetings it sometimes forcibly closed. It ran night schools; staged music and dance performanc­es; held large marches; continued to make innovative use of the courts; and spoke in many churches, becoming what liberation theology would later call a “prophetic voice” in these churches.

In 1929, women began to organise against municipal canteens and for the right to brew beer in towns across Natal. Raids on domestic brewers had been relentless, violent and destructiv­e, often involving theft and harassment. In November that year, the protests reached Durban. The ICU quickly responded with two large marches from the ICU Hall at 117 Prince Edward Street — the first was headed by a brass band, a man in a kilt and flag bearers carrying the Union Jack and a red flag with a hammer and sickle.

In June, the dockworker­s — who were housed together and well able to mobilise swiftly and effectivel­y — declared a boycott of the beer halls.

Champion was initially hostile to the idea but, in the end, had to lend his support, as did Josiah Gumede, the ANC president. Gumede had visited Moscow in 1927 for the celebratio­n of the 10th anniversar­y of the Bolshevik revolution. At an ICU meeting at Cartwright’s Flats, Gumede declared: “The ICU has taken the place of the Congress absolutely in Natal and that shows that the officers of the Congress were wrong to think that they could think for other people … Now let us combine and take our freedom …”

On June 17, all five of the Durban beer halls were picketed by the dock workers and a white motorist was killed. A mob of white people rushed to the ICU Hall to exact vengeance.

Paul la Hausse gives a concise account of events: “White ‘vigilantes’ laid siege to the ICU Hall and, by evening, close on two thousand white civilians, from every class, and

three hundred and fifty policemen faced six thousand stick-wielding African workers. These Africans had poured from every quarter of town to relieve the beleaguere­d men, women and children in the hall and in the ensuing clashes one hundred and twenty people were injured and eight mortally wounded.”

In the end the “vigilantes” destroyed the ICU Hall, along with the instrument­s of its famous brass band. In September 1930, Champion was banished from Natal for three years.

The political initiative shifted to the Communist Party of South Africa which, amid opposition from the ICU leadership, organised a mass passburnin­g by workers on December 16 1930. It was led by Johannes Nkosi, a leader of the dockworker­s. More than 2 000 passes were handed in to be burnt before the police shot and killed Nkosi on the platform. The protesters fought back and two others were killed.

The communist party went undergroun­d. By 1931 the ICU was a spent force in South Africa, although various offshoots continued for the next 30 years and it continued to flourish in Rhodesia until the 1950s.

We could say, with Rosa Luxemburg, that: “The most precious, because lasting, thing in the rapid ebb and flow of the wave [of struggle] is its mental sediment.”

Jason Jingoes, a much-arrested ICU leader, captured the essence of that sediment in an interview in March 1927: “Although its initials [ICU] stood for a fancy title, to us Bantu it meant basically: when you ill-treat the African people, I See You. I see you when you do not protect the Bantu; when an African woman with her child on her back is knocked down by the cars in the street, I see you; I see you when you kick my brother, I see you.”

The history of the ICU offers a window into a very different kind of political imaginatio­n

Richard Pithouse is an associate professor at the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research

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