Nelson Mandela's address to rally in Durban
25 February 1990
Text in italics indicates where the address was delivered in
Zulu.
Friends, comrades, and the people of Natal, I greet you all. I do so in the
name of peace, the peace that is so desperately and urgently needed in this
region.
In Natal, apartheid is a deadly cancer in our midst, setting house against
house, and eating away at the precious ties that bound us together. This strife
among ourselves wastes our energy and destroys our unity. My message to those of
you involved in this battle of brother against brother is this: take your guns,
your knives, and your pangas(1),
and throw them into the sea. Close down the death factories. End this war
now!
We also come together today to renew the ties that make us one people, and to
reaffirm a single united stand against the oppression of apartheid. We have
gathered here to find a way of building even greater unity than we already have.
Unity is the pillar and foundation of our struggle to end the misery which is
caused by the oppression which is our greatest enemy. This repression and the
violence it creates cannot be ended if we fight and attack each other.
The people of Natal have fought a long struggle against oppression. The
victory of the army of King Cetshwayo kaMpande at the Battle of Isandlwana in
1879 has been an inspiration for those of us engaged in the struggle for justice
and freedom in South Africa. At Isandlwana, disciplined Zulu regiments, armed
only with shields and spears, but filled with courage and determination, thrust
back the guns and cannon of the British imperialists. When the British finally
managed to defeat the Zulu kingdom, they divided it into 13 new chiefdoms.
Later, they annexed the area and gave the land to white farmers. In 1906, in the
reign of Dinizulu kaCetshwayo, the colonialists introduced the Poll Tax (Head
Tax) and other regulations designed to force Africans to work for wages on white
farms. The Zulu people, led by Chief Bambatha, refused to bow their proud heads
and a powerful spirit of resistance developed, which, like the battle of
Isandlwana, inspired generations of South Africans.
The ANC pays tribute to these heroic struggles of the Zulu people to combat
oppression. And we are very proud that from the ranks of the Zulu people have
emerged outstanding cadres of the ANC and national leaders like Dube(2),
Seme(3),
Lutuli. We remember another son of Natal, the young and talented Communist Party
organiser, Johannes Nkosi, who, with three others, was brutally murdered in
1930, when he led a march into Durban to protest against the hated pass
laws.
Another strand in the struggle against oppression began with the formation,
right here in Natal, of the first black political organisation in Africa. The
Natal Indian Congress, founded in 1894, began a tradition of extra-parliamentary
protest that continues into the present. The next decade saw the increasing
radicalisation of Indian politics under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi.
In 1906, at the time when Bambatha led sections of Africans in a war to
destroy the Poll Tax, our brothers who originated from India, led by Mahatma
Gandhi, fought against the oppression of the British Government. In 1913, we see
Indian workers striking in the sugar-cane plantations and in the coal mines.
These actions show the oppressed of South Africa waging a struggle to end
exploitation and oppression, mounting an important challenge to the repressive
British rule.
In the passive resistance campaign of 1946, over 2,000 Indians went to jail,
many for occupying land reserved for whites. The campaign made clear the common
nature of Indian and African oppression and the necessity of united resistance.
In 1947, this led to the Xuma-Naicker-Dadoo Pact, and to the joint action of
Africans and Indians in the Defiance Campaign of 1952. We remind the people of
Natal of this long and proud tradition of cooperation between Africans and
Indians against racial discrimination and other forms of injustice and
oppression. We are extremely disturbed by recent acts of violence against our
Indian compatriots. The perpetrators of these acts are enemies of the liberation
movement.
Another great struggle in Natal has been that of the workers. In 1926, the
Durban branch of the ICU powerfully voiced the grievances of migrant workers on
the docks, railways and local industries. In the 1970s Durban workers led the
country in a movement to organise and fought for workers' rights. In January
1973, 2,000 workers at the Coronation Brick and Tile factory in Durban came out
on strike. They were followed by workers all over Durban. Out of these strikes
grew a host of new union federations and, eventually COSATU, the biggest and
most powerful labour organisation in our history. We recognise that battles won
in industrial disputes can never be permanently secure without the necessary
political changes. Our Defiance Campaign has succeeded in forcing the government
to scrap discriminatory laws and has brought us to the point where we are to
glimpse the outlines of a new South Africa. The Mass Democratic Movement stands
as testimony to the powerful alliance of workers and progressive political
organisations.
Whites, too, have made a contribution to the struggle in Natal. It began with
the lonely voices of Bishop Colenso and his daughters who denounced imperialist
injustices against the Zulu people and who campaigned vigorously for the freedom
of their leaders. The Natal Liberal Party waged steadfast campaigns against
removals, and its work has been continued into the present by people like Peter
Brown. Whites also contributed significantly to the resurgence of labour
struggles in the 1970s through the Wages Commission and the Trade Unions
Advisory and Coordinating Council.
Our struggle has won the participation of every language and colour every
stripe and hue in this country. These four strands of resistance and
organisation have inspired all South Africans, and provide the foundations of
our struggle today. We salute your proud and courageous history. No people
can boast more proudly of having ploughed a significant field in the struggle
than the people of Natal
The past is a rich resource on which we can draw in order to make decisions
for the future, but it does not dictate our choices. We should look back at the
past and select what is good, and leave behind what is bad. The issue of
chiefship is one such question. Not only in Natal, but all through the country,
there have been chiefs who have been good and honest leaders who have piloted
their people through the dark days of oppression with skill. These are the
chiefs who have looked after the interests of their people and who enjoy the
support of their people. We salute these traditional leaders. But there have
been many bad chiefs who have profited from apartheid and who have increased the
burden on their people. We denounce this misuse of office in the strongest
terms. There are also chiefs who have collaborated with the system, but who have
since seen the error of their ways. We commend their change of heart. Chiefly
office is not something that history has given to certain individuals to use or
abuse as they see fit. Like all forms of leadership, it places specific
responsibilities on its holders. As Luthuli, himself a chief, put it: 'A chief
is primarily a servant of the people. He is the voice of his people.'
The Zulu royal house continues today to enjoy the respect of its subjects. It
has a glorious history. We are confident that its members will act in ways that
will promote the well-being of all South Africans.
The ANC offers a home to all who subscribe to the principles of a free,
democratic, non-racial and united South Africa. We are committed to building a
single nation in our country. Our new nation will include blacks and whites,
Zulus and Afrikaners, and speakers of every other language. ANC
President-General Chief Luthuli said: 'I personally believe that here in South
Africa, with all of our diversities of colour and race, we will show the world a
new pattern for democracy. I think that there is a challenge to us in South
Africa, to set a new example for the world.' This is the challenge we face
today.
To do this we must eliminate all forms of factionalism and regionalism. We
praise organisations which have fought to retain the dignity of our people.
Although there are fundamental differences between us, we commend Inkatha for
their demand over the years for the unbanning of the ANC and the release of
political prisoners, as well as for their stand of refusing to participate in a
negotiated settlement without the creation of the necessary climate. This stand
of Inkatha has contributed in no small measure to making it difficult for the
regime to implement successive schemes designed to perpetuate minority rule.
The 1986 Indaba(4) solution proposed for Natal broke new ground in so far as it addressed the
question of the exclusion from political power of the African population of
Natal and sought to make regional change pioneer national change. But we are now
on the threshold of a very different scenario for national change. We are on the
edge of a much greater step forward, for all our people throughout South Africa.
There can be no separate solution for Natal under these conditions, nor can it
be argued any longer that there is a need. We believe Inkatha and all the people
of Natal would genuinely welcome a unitary, nonracial democratic South Africa,
the goal of millions throughout the country. Our call is, 'One nation, one
country.' We must be one people across the whole of South Africa!
Yet even now as we stand together on the threshold of a new South Africa,
Natal is in flames. Brother is fighting brother in wars of vengeance and
retaliation. Every family has lost dear ones in this strife. In the last few
years of my imprisonment my greatest burden, my deepest suffering, was caused by
reports which reached me of the terrible things which were happening here. All of us are bereft of loved ones. All of us are aggrieved. Your tears are
mine. What has happened has happened and must be accepted by you [the people of
this region (here Mandela evoked the terms of traditional praise songs in
addressing the people). I extend my condolences to all of you who have lost
your loved ones in this conflict.
It is my duty to remind you, in the middle of our great sufferings, of the
responsibility which we bear today. If we do not bring a halt to this conflict,
we will be in a grave danger of corrupting the proud legacy of our struggle. We
endanger the peace process in the whole of the country.
Apartheid is not yet dead. Equality and democracy continue to elude us. We do
not have access to political power. We need to intensify our struggle to achieve
our goals. But we cannot do this as long as the conflict amongst ourselves
continues. Vigilantes, thugs and gangs like the notorious Sinyoras, have taken
advantage of the hardships experienced by our people to profit and gain for
themselves. We can stop them, and the descent into lawlessness and violence only
by ceasing our feuds. We recognise that in order to bring war to an end, the two
sides must talk. We are pleased to inform you that we are presently preparing
for a meeting in the near future, between ourselves and the present Zulu
monarch, King Zwelithini Goodwill kaBhekuzulu. It is my earnest wish that the
meeting will establish a basis on which we can build a real peace.
Repeating the call made by Comrade Walter Sisulu at the Conference for a
Democratic Future, we extend the hand of peace to Inkatha and hope that it might
one day be possible for us to share a platform with its leader, Chief Mangosuthu
Gatsha Buthelezi. We recognise the right of all organisations which are not
racist to participate in political life. We commend the actions of those who
have involved themselves actively in the search for peace in Natal. We commend
the joint UDF-COSATU team. We also commend Dr Dhlomo, Dr Mdlalose, and Messrs
Nkheli, Ndlovu and Zondi from Inkatha, as well as the churches in Natal, and
certain business sectors, notably the Pietermaritzburg Chamber of Commerce. Our
search for peace is a search for strength.
As a result of our historic struggles we, in the Mass Democratic Movement and
in the ANC, are the premier political force in the country. This preeminence
confers on us responsibilities over and above the concerns of power politics. We
have a duty to look beyond our own ranks and our immediate concerns. We must
strive more earnestly to unite all the people of our country and to nurture that
unity into a common nationhood. Wherever divisions occur, such as in the strife
here in Natal, it is a reflection against us and our greater societal goals. We
need to look critically and candidly at aspects of our own practices which may
not be acceptable or wise. We need to be rigorous in identifying our own
contribution to the escalation of violence where it may occur. We have a greater
purpose than the defeat of rival oppressed groups. It is the creation of a
healthy and vibrant society.
We condemn, in the strongest possible terms, the use of violence as a way of
settling differences amongst our people. Great anger and violence can never
build a nation. The apartheid regime uses this strife as a pretext for further
oppression.
We would like to see in members of all seasoned political organisations the
total absence of intolerance towards those who differ from us on questions of
strategy and tactics. Those who approach problems with intolerant attitudes are
no credit to the struggle: they actively endanger our future.
The youth have been the shock troops of our struggle. We salute them for the
ground which they have gained. Only through commitment have these victories been
won; only through discipline can they be consolidated and made to last. The
youth must be like the warriors who fought under Shaka, the son of
Senzangakhona, fighting with great bravery and skill. These heroes obeyed the
commands of their commanders and their leaders. Today the community says, the
world says, and I say: end this violence. Let us not be ruled by anger. Our
youth must be ready to demonstrate the same perfect discipline as the armies of
King Shaka. If they do not, we will lose the ground which we have gained at such
great cost.
The parties to the conflict in Natal have disagreed about a great deal. We
have reached a stage where none of the parties can be regarded as right or
wrong. Each carries a painful legacy of the past few years. But both sides share
a common enemy: the enemy is that of inadequate housing, forced removals, lack
of resources as basic as that of water, and rising unemployment. The Freedom
Charter asserts that there should be houses, security and comfort for all. We
demand that the government provides these basic necessities of life. The
shortage of housing, water and work opportunities, the forced removal of people
and the destruction of their houses: these are our problems. They must not make
us enemies. We must take lessons from what happened in Lamontville when they
said: Asinamali(5) - We have no money! - they were expressing collectively the problems of the
whole community.
It is thus vital that we end the conflict in Natal, and end it now. Everyone
must commit themselves to peace. Women of Natal, in the past and at crucial
moments, you have shown greater wisdom than your menfolk. It was you who, in
1929 and again in 1959, identified and struck out at one of the roots of our
oppression. You launched powerful campaigns against beer halls. Women such as
Dorothy Nyembe, Gladys Manzi and Ruth Shabane showed sharpness of mind by
closing down the beer halls when the men were rendered useless by alcohol and
families were being broken up. I hope that the women will again stand up and put
their shoulders to the wheel together with the community to end the strife and
violence. More recently, the women of Chesterville arranged all-night vigils
to protect their children. Mothers, sisters and daughters of Natal, it falls to
you once again to intervene decisively.
I call on the women of Natal. Each and every one of you must play your
part! I charge you with a special responsibility here today. It is you, in
your wisdom now, who must begin the work of bringing peace to Natal. Tell your
sons, your brothers, and your husbands, that you want peace and security. It is
you who must show them the real enemy. All women know of mass poverty and
homelessness, of children dying from diseases caused by hunger, poverty and
repression. We must therefore end the strife and the fighting and the
misunderstanding in the community so that we defeat our common enemy, the
apartheid regime. Open the cooking pots and ask the men why there is so
little food inside. When the rains come into your homes, place the hands of your
men in the pools on the floor, and ask them, why? When your child ails, and you
have no money to take it to a doctor, ask them, why? There is only one answer,
and that answer is our common deprivation. Go out and meet the women on the
other side. Their story is the same. Then take your men with you. I want to hear
from you. From each and every community, I want a report. I want to hear the
story of how you made the peace. We place our trust in you.
I call on the people of Inanda. Join hands. All of you from Clermont, join
hands; Hambanathi, Hammarsdale, Chesterville and Mpophomeni, join hands. People
of Ashdown, Esikhaweni, Mbali, and Trustfeed, join hands. Those of you who are
from Maphumulo's area, you too. Residents of Durban and Pietermaritzburg, it is
your turn. Those from strife-torn Umlazi and tragic KwaMashu, join hands also. I
know each one of these names from my time in prison. I know each as-an explosion
of conflict. And those of you whose homes I have not named, you too should join
hands. We are many thousands gathered here in this stadium today. Let us now
pledge ourselves to peace and to unity. Join hands all of you and raise them up
for all to see.
A great deal of energy has been wasted by our people in violent actions
across the towns and villages of this province. If we could channel this energy
towards the real enemy of the people, apartheid, we could be free within days.
We have already waited for our freedom for far too long. We can wait no longer.
Join forces, Indians, Coloureds, Africans and freedom-loving Whites, to give
apartheid its final blow. In the process, let us develop active democracy.
Democratic structures which serve the people must be established in every
school, township, village, factory and farm.
Since my release, I have become more convinced than ever that the real makers
of history are the ordinary men and women of our country; their participation in
every decision about the future is the only guarantee of true democracy and
freedom. Undue reliance should not be placed on a white minority regime
concerned to protect white-minority rights as far as it can. Nor should our
reliance be placed on the abilities of the statesmen amongst us and our
political leaders to negotiate an acceptable settlement. It is only the united
action of you, the people, that will ensure that freedom is finally achieved. I
call, therefore, for an all-round intensification of our struggle. Together
we shall conquer!
MAYIBUYE iAFRIKA
AMANDLA!
- Machetes, widely used in Natal's sugar growing areas for
cutting cane. - Rev. John Langalibelele Dube, first President of the ANC.
- Pixley ka Isaka Seme, ANC founder member and its President
between 1930-7. - A proposal for a change in the structure of regional
government in Natal - A slogan of the 1983 campaign against rent increases in
Durban townships.





