S'bu Zikode's Wolpe lecture - Abahlali Basemjondolo - 30 June
2006
THE GREATEST THREAT TO FUTURE STABILITY IN OUR COUNTRY VS
THE GREATEST STRENGTH OF ABAHLALI BASEMJONDOLO MOVEMENT S.A.
(SHACK DWELLERS)
Many things have been said. Many things have been seen. Many
policies have been passed. Many people have voted. But what
has been done has not been done for the poor. It has been
done for the rich. The poor are outside. We have no country.
This is not the democracy that the poor fought for. We must
ask, are we citizens of this country? If we are not then who
are we and where are we?
AFRAID
I am afraid. Every day is an emergency in the jondolos. I
am afraid that the AIDS epidemic and poverty are the greatest
threat to future stability in our country. Our people are
dying. Our people are struggling just to survive.
Our desperation and anger can go in many directions. I am
afraid that it won't always go the people who are getting
richer while we suffer.
I remain afraid when I see how much is said at the high level
of government.
I am afraid when government and the NGOs and academics speak
about the poor all the time but so few want to speak to the
poor. I am afraid when it becomes clear that our job is just
to vote and then watch the rich speak about us as we get poorer.
We have seen that when the wild forests and plantations of
the rich are on fire there are often large helicopters with
hundreds of tons of water to extinguish the fires. But when
our shacks are on fire the helicopters and ambulances are
nowhere to be found. Mhlengi Khumalo, a one year old boy died
in a fire in Kennedy Road. When this happened there was neither
briyani nor Durban Electricity on the scene. Helicopters only
come for us when we want to march. The state comes for us
when we try to say what we think. We must understand this
lesson very well. We are on our own. We have no choice but
to fight. It is not about us but our children, our nation
and our country S.A.
I become ever more afraid when I see that so much money is
being spent at the high level e.g. at conference centres,
hotels, uShaka, stadiums, etc and that so little is being
spent at the grass root level where most of our people live
and suffer. Communities have had enough death. Families are
not only facing this high rate of mortality but must also
face the funeral expenses which also threaten our safety.
It is clear that Aids breeds poverty and poverty breeds Aids.
Both must be fought if we are not to be afraid in the future.
It is warned that this is not about making small changes to
policies. This is a class struggle. This is a struggle between
the Haves and Don't Haves. Our society can only be saved if
the Don't Haves win this struggle. If we loose this struggle
everyone will have to live afraid for ever. Everything will
be broken everywhere.
BRAVE
However I am brave now. More and more thousands of us are
becoming brave. We are brave enough to fight this struggle
now. We are brave because for the first time in history of
this country, South Africa, the poorest of the poor are saying
that it is time for us to begin to say "This is who we
are. This is where we are. This is how we live. This is what
we feel. This is what we think. This is how we want things
to be done so that we can live without fear.'
ABAHLALI BASEMJONDOLO MOVEMENT (SA) is the hope of the hopeless,
the home of the homeless, the voice of the poor of the poorest.
It is the ground for He/She who knows not that She /He knows
not that He/She knows not but knows that the poor suffer,
knows that this country is rich and knows exactly what made
and makes this country rich. Our movement seeks to bring the
government to the ground, to bring the institutions of government
& the private sector to the ground. We fight to bring
policies that affect our people under the control of our people.
We are realistic. We start where we are but we fight to bridge
the gap between the rich & the poor. We fight to make
those who are blind to poverty to be able to see the poverty
that we see. We work to show those who are blind to the power
of the poor to see the strength of the strong poor. The threat
of fires, storms, illnesses, police brutality and government
repression make it clear that if we do not stand up now and
act together, then, I am afraid, the poor citizens would once
be remembered to have not survived to be part of the beauty
of this nature.
STRENGTH
The Shack Dwellers (Abahlali baseMjondolo) have acknowledged
that, the majority of this country & this continent and
this world are the poor who are often undermined. This has
made it possible for us to mobilise the broader communities
who feel neglected by the State. It is the very same poverty
and neglect by the State that throws us together in our settlements
and from that togetherness we become strong. Our masses, our
unity and diversity is our strength, our pain, our voice.
We have become the strong poor. The politics if the strong
poor is an anti party politics. Our politics is not to put
someone in an office. Our politics is to put our people above
that office. And when we have finished with one office we
move on to the next office. Our politics is also not a politics
of a few people who have learnt some fancy political words
and who expect everyone to follow them because they know these
words. Our politics is a traditional home politics which is
understood very well by all the old mamas and gogos because
it affects their lives and gives them a home. In this home
everybody is important, everybody can speak and we look after
each other and think about situation and plan our fight together.
We believe that housing policy does not only require housing
specialists, rich consultants and government.
We believe that housing policy requires, most importantly,
the people who need the houses. But we also know, as poor
communities and as Shack dwellers that the broader poor have
no choice but to play a role in shaping and re-shaping this
country in to an anti-capitalist system. This is the task
that the betrayal of our struggle and the struggles of our
ancestors has given to us. We are on our own. We have to fight
this fight. Although we will fight for land and housing in
the city we know that this is not only a fight for land and
housing in the city. Giving reasonable budgets to democratic
development in district municipalities and advancing rural
areas will mean that people will no longer have no choice
but to leave their homes and build shacks everywhere. If the
shackdwellers do not belong to this country then they must
be sent back to where they belong. If they do belong here,
then they are entitled to all the benefits of the soil of
South Africa.
DEVELOPING AN ALTERNATIVE
The alternative, the direction of our struggle, will come
out of the thinking that we do in our communities. We are
doing this thinking all the time in our communities. Tonight
we can use this opportunity to do it here.
Let us start with some questions. I will ask these questions
now and then we can turn this lecture into a meeting. The
world is full of lectures.
Lectures usually come to us as one more way of making us
sit quietly while rich people think for us. In our struggle
we need meetings where everyone can speak and think together.
Have the poor Durban shackdwellers succeeded in their struggle
for land and housing in the city? What has been won? What
must still be won? What have we learned from our struggle?
Have the Western Cape QQ Section and Anti-Eviction Campaign
succeeded in their struggle for housing? What can be learnt
from their struggle?
Have the South Durban Communities succeeded in their fight
against the threats from the Engin refinery and the generally
poisonous environment?
What can be learnt from this struggle?
Have the flat residents such as Bayview, Albert Park, Sydenham
Heights, New Lands and Phoenix been attended to? What must
still be done? What can we learn from this struggle?
Have Bachu, Baig, Xulu, Shezi and Dimba been removed from
the offices of the community? Why are these people imposed
on us? What should we do about it?
Have the deaths of Monica Ngcobo , Tebogo Mkhonza, Komi Zulu
and Mhlengi Khumalo brought about any changes in our communities?
What have we learnt from these deaths? Why are our people
being killed by the police, by fire, by councillors? Why does
no one high up seem to care?
What stops the poor from becoming the political majority
of this country in which they are the majority of citizens?
What stops us from deciding the policies that affect our lives?
What stops from being in control of our future?
What strategy will force the blind government to see and
get the deaf government to hear? What strategy will force
those who are rich to share, those who do not give account
to account?
How can we unite our struggling communities and movements
to make them stronger?
I am optimistic that the "will" of the poor will
soon be done simple because the poor are the majority of this
country and the majority is beginning to speak for itself.
We have the courage to do what must be done. But this optimism
can only be kept for as long as democracy prevails so democracy
must be protected and deepened. This is why we took Sutcliffe
to court when he tried to ban us from marching. Comrades,
let us now think about these questions together.
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