Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Repression, Revelation and Resurrection: The Revival of the NIC
- 2 Black Consciousness and the Challenge to the ‘I’ in the NIC
- 3 Between Principle and Pragmatism: Debates over the SAIC, 1971−1978
- 4 Changing Geographies and New Terrains of Struggle
- 5 Class(rooms) of Dissent: Education Boycotts and Democratic Trade Unions, 1976−1985
- 6 Lenin and the Duma Come to Durban: Reigniting the Participation Debate
- 7 The Anti-SAIC Campaign of 1981: Prefigurative Politics?
- 8 Botha’s 1984 and the Rise of the UDF
- 9 Letters from Near and Afar: The Consulate Six
- 10 Inanda, Inkatha and Insurrection: 1985
- 11 Building Up Steam: Operation Vula and Local Networks
- 12 Between Fact and Factions: The 1987 Conference
- 13 ‘Caught With Our Pants Down’: The NIC and the Crumbling of Apartheid 1988−1990
- 14 Snapping the Strings of the UDF
- 15 Digging Their Own Grave: Debating the Future of the NIC
- 16 The Ballot Box, 1994: A Punch in the Gut?
- 17 Between Rajbansi’s ‘Ethnic Guitar’ and the String of the ANC Party List
- Conclusion: A Spoke in the Wheel
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Repression, Revelation and Resurrection: The Revival of the NIC
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Repression, Revelation and Resurrection: The Revival of the NIC
- 2 Black Consciousness and the Challenge to the ‘I’ in the NIC
- 3 Between Principle and Pragmatism: Debates over the SAIC, 1971−1978
- 4 Changing Geographies and New Terrains of Struggle
- 5 Class(rooms) of Dissent: Education Boycotts and Democratic Trade Unions, 1976−1985
- 6 Lenin and the Duma Come to Durban: Reigniting the Participation Debate
- 7 The Anti-SAIC Campaign of 1981: Prefigurative Politics?
- 8 Botha’s 1984 and the Rise of the UDF
- 9 Letters from Near and Afar: The Consulate Six
- 10 Inanda, Inkatha and Insurrection: 1985
- 11 Building Up Steam: Operation Vula and Local Networks
- 12 Between Fact and Factions: The 1987 Conference
- 13 ‘Caught With Our Pants Down’: The NIC and the Crumbling of Apartheid 1988−1990
- 14 Snapping the Strings of the UDF
- 15 Digging Their Own Grave: Debating the Future of the NIC
- 16 The Ballot Box, 1994: A Punch in the Gut?
- 17 Between Rajbansi’s ‘Ethnic Guitar’ and the String of the ANC Party List
- Conclusion: A Spoke in the Wheel
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
By the early 1960s the NIC, battered by state repression, was no longer a significant force in the anti-apartheid struggle. Ela Gandhi, great-granddaughter of the Mahatma and who became vice-president of the revived NIC in 1971, recounted that within South Africa the 1960s were
really dark years when we felt complete disillusionment … The bannings took place in 1963, the arrests took place within three years, and there was a deep sort of gloom and unhappiness. There was a lot of fear in the community … because there was this scare of communism orchestrated from the government … fear as they could detain you without any reason, they could ban you without any reason. There was a lot of gloom until the student movement started.
This ‘gloom’ came in the aftermath of the heady days of the 1950s. Yet before this, there had been years of advance. Dr Monty Naicker's emergence as leader in the 1940s took the NIC in a more radical direction, and in a parallel development in the Transvaal, Dr Yusuf Dadoo, Naicker's contemporary at Edinburgh University, became leader of the Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC).
In the early 1950s the Indian Congresses began to stitch together a working relationship with the ANC that saw them engaging jointly in a series of anti-apartheid campaigns. This relationship was consolidated with the adoption of the Freedom Charter in 1955. As Ela Gandhi pointed out, this progress was blunted by the banning of the ANC and the PAC following the Sharpeville massacre of March 1960. While the NIC was not proscribed, the imprisonment, banning and forced exile of key members resulted in its diminution in the public domain. Support work continued, and NIC founding father Gandhi and leaders of the 1940s, such as Monty Naicker and Kesaveloo Goonam, continued to evoke respect, but there was a lack of visible leadership among Indians. ‘Own affairs’ institutions set up by the apartheid government began to gain ground. It was only at the end of the decade that the NIC began to stir again, sparked partly by the celebrations in 1969 to mark the centenary of Gandhi's birth.
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- Colour, Class and CommunityThe Natal Indian Congress, 1971-1994, pp. 11 - 28Publisher: Wits University PressPrint publication year: 2021