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Fountain of non-racial sport and politics

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HE name of the Currie’s Fountain sports field, popularly known as “Currie’s”, has its origins in the 1870s when a waterworks – Durban’s first reliable water source – was in the area.

Although the waterworks and tower named Currie’s Fountain have long ceased to exist, the name remained when the area became a sports ground. It was in the marshy Western vlei or “flats”, as this area was known, and formally became a sports facility for the Indian community in 1925.

Golfers, cyclists, athletes, tennis players and the ever-increasing number of soccer and cricket players were all catered for. This became the premier soccer ground in Durban, not only for Indians but for “nonEuropea­ns” in general for the next six decades.

When the original lease expired in 1950 there were six soccer fields, four cricket pitches, three tennis courts, a quartermil­e cinder track, a nine-hole golf course, a refreshmen­t room and a clock tower.

BOXING

In the late 1940s boxing promoter Nat Moodley staged an open-air boxing tournament at Currie’s with local favourite Mannie Dixon fighting Alex Makela. It was touted as the first non-European floodlit boxing tournament in the country.

Two Curries all-time greats were Elijah “Tap Tap” Makhatini and Maxwell Malinga.

Malinga lost to Makhatini in 1971 but beat him in a return match at Currie’s in 1972.

In 1974, Malinga drew over 10 rounds with American Alvin Anderson, then the World Boxing Council’s No 6 worldranke­d fighter.

Makhatini was regarded as one of the best fighters in the country in his heyday.

He won 11 straight fights at Currie’s before meeting Joseph Sishi for the Natal (non-white) Middleweig­ht championsh­ip in 1971.

In September 1972, he beat his first internatio­nal opponent, then former world welterweig­ht champion Curtis Cokes, at Currie’s.

Natal middleweig­ht champion Joseph Sishi fought 43 times at Currie’s.

Currie’s also provided a platform to several Zimbabwean­s (then “Rhodesians”), the most famous of whom was Mohamed “Tar Baby” Afonso. He fought the likes of Fraser Mamela, Phineas Mthembu, Joe Ngidi, and Joseph Sishi at Currie’s.

GOLF

The Durban Golf Club, formerly known as the Durban Indian Golf Club, was founded in 1928 and with the co-operation of the Durban Indian Sports Ground Associatio­n, nine tees and greens were laid on the boundary fence of Currie’s Fountain.

Par for the course was 68 and the membership fee was two shillings and six pence with monthly subscripti­on fees set at one shilling.

This was to become the first golf course for non-whites in the country and the home of Indian golfers, particular­ly in Natal, for more than 25 years.

The club was allowed to use the golf course only on Saturday and Sunday mornings and whenever there were no soccer or cricket fixtures.

SOCCER

One of the milestones of the 1930s was a tour by a soccer team from India, which played a series of matches throughout the country, including at Currie’s, in 1934. The 1949 chapter of the Sam China Cup was played at Currie’s, when Southern Natal beat Northern Natal 3-0 in front of 15 000 spectators.

The name Sam China was inscribed in the memory of many generation­s of Indians in South Africa, as the name of the premier soccer competitio­n in which Indians competed nationally for almost seven decades.

The last tournament at Currie’s took place in 1969 when a crowd of 25 000 witnessed Southern Natal defeat Western Province 3-1.

Although supposedly nonracial, a pattern of inter-race soccer tournament­s for the Singh Trophy, between African, Indian and coloured teams, started in the late 1940s and lasted until 1960.

From the 1950s soccer, which had been played separately by Africans, Indians and coloureds, would increasing­ly be played on the same field, although still in racially divided teams.

On September 30, 1951, the South African Soccer Federation was founded and launched at Currie’s, followed by a Goodwill tournament between national African, coloured and Indian teams to mark the historic occasion.

The first match of the profession­al South African Soccer League was played at Currie’s on April 9, 1961 between Aces United and Blackpool United. Teams such as Orlando Pirates, Moroka Swallows, Real Fighters, Avalon Athletics, Lincoln City, Hearts, Maritzburg City and Aces United played in the pro-ranks, which became an instant success.

Large crowds turned up to see some of the big names at Currie’s.

After a four-year lapse, profession­al soccer was given a boost with the formation of the Federation Profession­al League (FPL).

Sponsorshi­p was a major problem for non-racial organisati­ons and the FPL had its fair share of difficulti­es in this regard.

Undaunted, the FPL conducted its affairs with voluntary staff out of an undertaker’s parlour in Grey Street.

The FPL was launched with seven teams: Avalon Athletics, Aces United, Verulam Suburbs, Manning Rangers, Maritzburg City, Chatsworth Rovers and Transvaal United, with a R4 000 sponsorshi­p secured from RK Naidoo’s employers, the Stellenbos­ch Farmers’ Winery (SFW). By 1971 the FPL had become national in character with teams from the Cape also joining. Later Berea, Cape Town Spurs, Glenville, Bluebells, Dynamos, Swaraj and Sundowns joined the League.

Although sponsorshi­p was always a major concern for the FPL, the efforts of a number of individual­s secured sponsorshi­ps, and 10 years later 15 clubs competed for a total prizemoney of R100 000.

The cup finals of the FPL were the premier soccer events of the year.

Since its inception in 1969, the SFW were the main sponsors with the Mainstay League Cup, followed by the bottlers of Coca-Cola, who started their R5 000 sponsorshi­p in 1974 when the Mainstay Cup was replaced by the Coca-Cola Shield.

The FPL suffered a serious setback when all sponsorshi­ps were withdrawn and a “Save the Fed” fund-raising campaign was started.

In 1979 the presidency of the FPL changed from RK Naidoo to Ashwin Trikamjee, heralding a new era in the League’s history.

The United Tobacco Company Cup in the 1960s, the Mainstay Cup of the late 1960s and early 1970s, and the CocaCola Cup finals of the 1970s drew capacity crowds at Currie’s, made up of young and old men and women supporters, vendors, police and their dogs, businessme­n, politician­s, officials, beauty queens, sponsors and gangsters.

The FPL disbanded in 1990 to join the NPSL in forming the National Soccer League, and in so doing closed a chapter of soccer history at Currie’s spanning 65 years.

POLITICS

Political gatherings at Curries date back to 1913 when large numbers of Indians met at Currie’s to resist the tax laws of that period.

The Natal Indian Congress election was held in 1945 at Currie’s where the radical faction of the NIC was elected, taking the organisati­on on a different political trajectory.

In 1946 the Women’s Action Committee of the Passive Resistance Council hosted a fiveday “Freedom Fair” to raise funds for the Passive Resistance Campaign.

The banning, house-arrests and the Treason Trial resulted in a short lull in political activity in the early 1960s that was resurrecte­d by the Black Consciousn­ess Movement (BCM) that emerged in the late 1960s, leading to the formation of the South African Students Organisati­on.

The 1970s were characteri­sed by another phase of political activity and resistance leading up to the Pro-Frelimo Rally planned at Currie’s in 1974.

The violent clash with police at the banned rally was followed by the arrests and detention of a number of BCM leaders in the mid 1970s, some of whom were jailed on Robben Island.

It was the formation of the United Democratic Front (UDF) and Cosatu trade union in the 1980s that had to take up the responsibi­lity of leadership in the struggle against apartheid.

Currie’s became the main venue where these struggles were staged from the mid 1940s.

These included the 1946 Passive Resistance rally and the rallies against the Group Areas Act in the 1950s, the Defiance Campaign rally in 1952, the Pro-Frelimo rally in 1974, followed in to the 1980s by Cosatu affiliates rallies and Sayco, Mawu, Sacos, the UDF and IFP rallies.

In the 1990s it was the preferred venue for the ANC Women’s League when it was re-launched and the first SACP rally in KZN in 30 years, after organisati­ons were unbanned.

It was also the venue for an Umkhonto we Sizwe rally in 1993 when the liberation army was in the process of being disbanded into a People’s Army.

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 ?? PICTURE: SIYANDAMAY­EZA ?? Researcher Leonard Rosenberg.
PICTURE: SIYANDAMAY­EZA Researcher Leonard Rosenberg.

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