Post

Salute the working class heroes

- SELVAN NAIDOO KIRU NAIDOO

DO YOU remember the sea of workers thronging the pavement outside SA Clothing in Mobeni craning their necks to catch sight of their buses going home before the sunset? Or the tired throngs dashing down the steep stairways of the railway stations at Berea Road, Rossburgh, and Clairwood to feed their children in far-off townships?

We must remember them and honour their labour. May Day celebrates the working women and men of the world. One of the versions of the revolution­ary workers’ anthem, The Internatio­nale, screams:

“Arise ye pris’ners of starvation, Arise ye wretched of the earth, For justice thunders condemnati­on, A better world’s in birth!”

The struggles and gains made by the trade union movement have changed the face of world history. As children of working-class families, we nail our socialist loyalties to the mast.

It is the workers of the world who drive the engines building economies and societies. Too often, worker stories are shoved to the margins of history or even worse, never recognised. Subaltern studies theorist Ranajit Guha goes further to note that elite historiogr­aphy of nationalis­t or neo-nationalis­ts share the prejudice that the making of nations are exclusivel­y or predominan­tly elite achievemen­ts.

Let’s each break that prejudice by recording and telling the stories of the workers closest to us. Two workers of incredible willpower and dogged determinat­ion to rise against all odds are the subject of this Workers’ Day story.

Thulisiwe Thembisile Kubheka of eShowe was born in 1989, and raised alongside two brothers by their grandparen­ts while their parents worked in the city. Thuli, as she is affectiona­tely called, completed her matric in 2006. Two years later, she obtained an office assistant certificat­e from Boston College.

She was then employed as a security guard by Marshall Security, being posted at various schools. There she developed a love for young children. Thuli assisted with homework while the children waited for their parents at the secured entrance of the school. She was then promoted to a front gate security guard, stationed at the prestigiou­s boys-only Northwood School in Durban North in 2017, where her life changed dramatical­ly.

Her cheerful dispositio­n and willingnes­s to help saw her being employed by the school as the front office receptioni­st in 2022. She efficientl­y managed the daily comings and goings of boys, visitors, teachers, and parents with a warm welcome and meticulous attention to detail.

When Thuli started at Northwood she quietly enrolled to study for a Bachelor of Education degree through Unisa, in spite of not having enough funds. She used her child support grant to pay for her studies while a portion of her salary as a security guard was sent to feed her extended family at eShowe.

In October 2022, the government grant stopped. By divine interventi­on and the kind spirit of prefect master Mrs Nicky Torguis and the schoolboy prefect body of 2022, Thuli was able to pay for her studies. She graduated with 21 distinctio­ns in her Bachelor of Education degree in 2023.

In April this year, Thuli found her true calling when she was employed by the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education as a Grade 3 teacher at Golden Hours Primary School in Durban North. From security guard to teacher, Thulisiwe Thembisile Kubheka shines as a beacon of hope for workers striving for a better life for their families and themselves.

Another worker whose life’s journey is just as inspiring is Sathiaseel­an Ponnen who began work as a “page boy” at the Durban Club on April 1, 1965, earning R26 a month. Eminent scholar on indenture in South Africa, Professor Joy Brain, draws constant attention to the role of “special servants” in growing

the economy of colonial Natal. The story of waiters like Ponnen is also the subject of a forthcomin­g book on the Indian waiters who built the tourism industry in Durban.

By 1880, many “special servants” were brought to Durban and indentured to service the needs of colonial-era establishm­ents from the Victoria Embankment to the length of the beachfront promenade. The posh, members-only Durban Club, with bay views, clad with Edwardian and Renaissanc­e-styled capitals, arches, pilasters and mouldings, was built in 1904.

The club employed a sizeable staff of Indian waiters. The agreement to form the Durban Club was signed by a group of the town’s “gentlemen” on June 14, 1854. The agreement read: “We, the Undersigne­d, hereby agree to form a Club to be called the D’Urban Club for the purpose of playing at Billiards, Chess and as a Reading and News Room … ”

“Special Servant” waiters were highly sought after as they spoke English and were trained in specialise­d skills. Waiters earned better wages than most indentured workers from the plantation­s with their prized jobs being reserved in a tight network that allowed for generation­al handover to sons, nephews, or grandchild­ren.

Sathiaseel­an Ponnen was employed by the Durban Club on the recommenda­tions of his uncle and grandfathe­r, Chinsamy Pillay, who managed one of the five bars as head barman. His retirement opened the door for 18-yearold Ponnen.

In his smartly decorated Phoenix home where the floor tiles of the lounge match the grand black-and-white checkered pattern of the Durban Club floors, Ponnen recalled how the 103 porters, waiters, and barmen were given number

tags instead of name tags when he started work at the club in 1965. He was given the number 7.

This method of recording harks back to how indentured workers were commodifie­d by numbers, with the first indentured worker named Davaram being labeled No 1, and the last worker, Mr PN Murugasam, identified as No 152 184. Those workers arrived on 384 ships between 1860 and 1911 to labour in building the struggling economy of colonial Natal.

Years later, the Durban Club replaced the shameful number identifica­tion with name tags. Another irony was that Ponnen was given the name Raymond Ponnen because a waiter by the same name had left.

Despite the indignity of being robbed of his ancestral identity, Ponnen climbed through the ranks at the club, excelling at every level.

He struck a handsome pose, charming, discipline­d and immaculate­ly turned out with gleaming shoes.

He never missed a day’s work. Starting as a porter, his diligence saw him being promoted to head barman following in the footsteps of his esteemed grandfathe­r.

Ponnen’s exceptiona­l memory saw him prepare the standing order for club members from Shepstone & Wylie Attorneys for 15 years as they religiousl­y reached the bar each Friday.

Ron Williams, the mayor of Durban from 1972 to 1974, took a liking to Ponnen, insisting on his service at the club, even employing him at his residence as a private butler hosting Durban’s (no doubt racially segregated) Who’s Who.

Ponnen’s skill with numbers was recognised by the club’s bookkeeper, Mr BE Chambers, which led to him working in the accounts department where he eventually retired in 2005. Despite his new position, the club had Ponnen double up, assisting with the bar when the barman was off sick.

When he retired, a grand party was thrown in his honour where he was served his favourite tipple, palm ginger beer.

He was awarded a Durban Club tie and lifetime membership. Such were the celebratio­n and contradict­ions of his working life.

This Workers’ Day is against the backdrop of a world bedevilled by conflict, poverty and rising inequality. Patriarchy and unfettered capitalism see the rich getting unashamedl­y richer.

The heroes building a better world must always be the Thulisiwe Thembisile Kubhekas and Sathiaseel­an Ponnens, giving hope that the workers have nothing to lose but their chains.

Selvan Naidoo serves as the volunteer curator of the

1860 Heritage Centre; and Kiru Naidoo organises the Made in Chatsworth weekend markets at Depot Road Memorial School. Their books are available at www.madeindurb­an.co.za The authors may be contacted at 082 940 8163.

 ?? ?? WOMEN working in the clothing industry waiting at Grimsby Road to catch a bus to Chatsworth. | Page 131, Chatsworth, The making of a South African Township, Edited by Ashwin Desai and Goolam Vahed
WOMEN working in the clothing industry waiting at Grimsby Road to catch a bus to Chatsworth. | Page 131, Chatsworth, The making of a South African Township, Edited by Ashwin Desai and Goolam Vahed
 ?? Ponnen Collection
| Sathiaseel­an ?? SATHIASEEL­AN Ponnen in his Phoenix home where the floor tiles of the lounge match the grand black-and-white checkered pattern of the Durban Club floors.
Ponnen Collection | Sathiaseel­an SATHIASEEL­AN Ponnen in his Phoenix home where the floor tiles of the lounge match the grand black-and-white checkered pattern of the Durban Club floors.
 ?? | Sathiaseel­an Ponnen Collection ?? SATHIASEEL­AN Ponnen pictured at his desk at the Durban Club in 2010 working in the capacity of an accounts clerk.
| Sathiaseel­an Ponnen Collection SATHIASEEL­AN Ponnen pictured at his desk at the Durban Club in 2010 working in the capacity of an accounts clerk.
 ?? | Sathiaseel­an Ponnen Collection ?? A YOUNG Sathiaseel­an Ponnen, left, in his Durban Club uniform, walking the streets of Durban.
| Sathiaseel­an Ponnen Collection A YOUNG Sathiaseel­an Ponnen, left, in his Durban Club uniform, walking the streets of Durban.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? | Durban Down Memory Lane Facebook page. ?? THE Durban Club pictured in the early 1900s.
| Durban Down Memory Lane Facebook page. THE Durban Club pictured in the early 1900s.
 ?? ?? THULISIWE Thembisile Kubheka employed as a security guard for Marshall Security, 2016.
THULISIWE Thembisile Kubheka employed as a security guard for Marshall Security, 2016.
 ?? | Supplied ?? KUBHEKA at her Unisa graduation ceremony last year.
| Supplied KUBHEKA at her Unisa graduation ceremony last year.
 ?? ?? THE Durban Club name tag of Sathiaseel­an Ponnen.
THE Durban Club name tag of Sathiaseel­an Ponnen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa