Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Cape activists recall days of student protest

Local schools expressed solidarity

- ZENZILE KHOISAN

RECALLING the events that began in Soweto on a winter’s morning on June 16, 1976, anti- apartheid activist Sahu Barron wrote: “When schoolchil­dren stand up to police guns, demanding to be taught in their parents’ tongue, you know that the time of a nation has come, in South Africa.”

For Barron, and for millions of people who took a stand against apartheid locally and worldwide, the uprisings of 1976 are often recalled as an event that took place in Soweto on June 16, when police opened fire on students marching to express their condemnati­on of the apartheid policy to enforce Afrikaans as the medium of instructio­n as part of Bantu education in black schools.

That day is invariably associated with Sam Nzima’s picture of 18- year- old activist Mbuyisa Makhubo carrying Hector Pieterson, a massacre victim, in his arms.

However, there is a larger story, as the rebellion spread across the country and by August 1976 had erupted in black and coloured townships in the Western Cape, starting with a student boycott at the University of the Western Cape and spreading across the Cape Peninsula.

There were running battles between protesters and police at Cape Town train station, the Grand Parade and in streets of the CBD.

It is this narrative that lies at the heart of an initiative of the Cape Town chapter of the Tshisimani Centre for Activist Education, which intends putting these events into perspectiv­e and crafting an authentic representa­tion of the uprising in the Cape.

The centre is launching an oral and documentar­y history project. Working with a group of 25 young people, the centre plans to document the events of 1976 in Cape Town. The group will participat­e in a six-month project as interviewe­rs, reearchers and photograph­ers.

Dinga Sikwebu, a unionist affiliated with the centre, said this was part of a project “to excavate invisible and hidden histories. It is part of an agenda to move away from Soweto-centred versions of what was in actual fact a national uprising”.

“Through the project, the centre hopes to inspire other micro and local histories of the 1976 revolt.”

When the rebellion started, Sikwebu was a 15-year-old Form 2 student at Sizamile Secondary (now Oscar Mpetha High) in Nyanga. He considers this the moment his life changed.

Sikwebu said there was a need to properly incorporat­e the history of 1976 in Cape Town.

“There is a very Soweto-centric approach in the whole of the 1976 narrative; understand­ably so. But if we are to learn anything from what happened 40 years ago, we must tease out what actually happened although the uprising began it also spread to other parts of the country and as it moved it took different forms in different areas,” Sikwebu said.

There was, he said, a need to recognise everyone’s contributi­on to the Struggle.

“With only four high schools in black African townships and hundreds of coloured schools, what did it mean to take up a campaign on Afrikaans as a medium of instructio­n?

“How did the thousands of Afrikaans-speaking students react to assertions that their mothertong­ue was the language of the oppressor?

“What jolted them to take part in the campaign with their counterpar­ts in Langa, Nyanga and Gugulethu?”

One of the activists who in 1976 rose to that challenge was Zelda Holtzman, the suspended parlia- mentary protection head .

She “was there when the schools boycotted and was an active participan­t”.

Holtzman said although there was a news blackout, as informatio­n came through, young students “could relate to the suffering of their peers in Soweto and other townships, because the same government had denied coloured students opportunit­ies and made them live in unbearable social conditions”.

“For us the issue was the gutter education that was forced on us, our living conditions and because of black consciousn­ess, our demand for black power.”

She recalled how, on August 25, 1976, tragedy struck. “I had just spoken to my friend, Christophe­r Truter, after which students from Bonteheuwe­l High School were marching to Arcadia High School.

“During that march a gunshot went off, and it was my friend, Christophe­r, who had been shot by a policeman in a blue car. That moment changed my life forever,” said Holtzman.

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Dinga Sikwebu
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