The Federation
of South African Women (FEDSAW or FSAW) was launched on 17 April
1954 in Johannesburg as the first attempt
to establish a broad-based women’s organisation. This was the
brainchild of Ray Simons who drew in others such as Helen
Joseph, Lillian
Ngoyi and Amina Cachalia who formed the steering committee for the
organisation. One hundred and forty-six delegates, representing 230,000
women from all parts of South Africa, attended the founding conference
and pledged their support for the general campaigns of the Congress
Alliance. Among the African leaders of the Federation, a large number
were trade unionists, primarily from the clothing, textile, and food
and canning industries. Some were teachers and nurses, members of the
small African professional class. Since fewer than one per cent of
African working women were engaged in production work in the 1950s,
the trade unionists, like the nurses and teachers, represented but
a fraction of all adult African women. The involvement of the trade
unionists proved to be critical, however. They contributed invaluable
organisational skills and mobilising techniques to the women`s struggle.
Although the Federation
of South African Women included some individual members, it was primarily
composed of affiliated women`s groups, African,
Indian, "Coloured" and white political organisations, and
trade unions. According to its constitution, the objectives of the
Federation were to bring the women of South Africa together to secure
full equality of opportunity for all women, regardless of race, colour
or creed; to remove social and legal and economic disabilities; to
work for the protection of the women and children.
The "Women`s Charter", written at the first conference, called
for the enfranchisement of men and women of all races; equality of
opportunity in employment; equal pay for equal work; equal rights in
relation to property, marriage and children; and the removal of all
laws and customs that denied women such equality. The Charter further
demanded paid maternity leave, childcare for working mothers, and free
and compulsory education for all South African children.
Although the Federation
acknowledged that the primary task at hand was the struggle for national
liberation, it warned that the struggle
would not be won without the full participation of women. Applying
a distorted version of "tribal" law, which had governed pre-industrial
African society, South African courts continued to regard African women
as perpetual minors under the permanent tutelage of their male guardians.
Women`s property rights were severely limited and control over their
own earnings minimal. The authors of the "Women`s Charter" did
not hesitate to deal with these issues. According to the Charter, laws
governing African marriage and property relations which had "lagged
behind the development of society no longer correspond to the actual
social and economic position of women". As a result, "the
law has become an obstacle to the progress of the women, and therefore,
a brake on the whole of society". The blame for "this intolerable
condition" rested in part with "a large section of our menfolk" who
refuse "to concede to us women the rights and privileges which
they demand for themselves". The Charter concluded that women
shall teach the men that they cannot hope to liberate themselves from
the evils of discrimination and prejudice as long as they fail to extend
to women complete and unqualified equality in law and practice. Further,
it stated that freedom cannot be won for any one section or for the
people as a whole as long as women are kept in bondage. The demands
laid out in the "Women`s Charter" were ultimately incorporated
into the "Freedom Charter", adopted by the Congress
of the People in Kliptown on June 25-26, 1955.
A major task of the Federation
in succeeding years was the organisation of massive protests against
the extension of pass laws to women. Together
with the ANC Women`s League, the Federation organised scores of demonstrations
outside Government offices in towns and cities around the country.
The first national protest took place on October 27, 1955, when 2,000
women of all races marched on the Union Buildings in Pretoria, planning
to meet with the Cabinet ministers responsible for the administration
of apartheid laws. Ida Mntwana led the march and the marchers were
mainly African women form the Johannesburg region. The Minister of
Native Affairs, Dr. Verwoerd, under whose jurisdiction the pass laws
fell, pointedly refused to receive a multiracial delegation. On August
9, 1956, 20,000 women from all parts of South Africa staged a second
march on the Union Buildings. Prime Minister Strijdom, who had been
notified of the women`s mission, was not there to receive them. This
gathering of women was unprecedented in attracting one of the largest
crowds ever to gather at the Union Buildings. The success of the demonstration
challenged the stereotypes about women and their lack of political
drive. Further, it enhanced the prestige of FEDSAW within the Congress
Alliance and as a result, 9 August was declared Women’s Day to
commemorate the achievement. The day is still celebrated as such at
present and has also been declared a public holiday.
In December 1956, 156 leaders of the Congress Alliance were rounded
up and detained, this led to the Treason Trial that went on for four
and a half years. During the Treason Trial, FEDSAW women organised
support for the treason trialists and their families. However, the
organisation suffered along with the Alliance as women such as Lillian
Ngoyi, Helen Joseph, Annie Silinga and Francis
Baard were detained
for plotting to overthrow the government.