1960–1962
from Letters
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 May 2019
Summary
Robert Sobukwe
to Major-General C.I. Rademeyer,
Commissioner of Police,
Cape Town, 16 March 1960
Sir,
My organization, the Pan Africanist Congress, will be starting a sustained, disciplined, non-violent campaign against the Pass Laws on Monday the 21st March 1960. I have given strict instructions, not only to members of my organization but also to African people in general, that they should not allow themselves to be provoked into violent action by anyone. In a Press Statement I am releasing soon, I repeat that appeal and make one to the police too.
I am now writing to you to instruct the Police to refrain from actions that may lead to violence. It is unfortunately true that many white policemen, brought up in the racist hothouse of South Africa, regard themselves as champions of white supremacy and not as law officers. In the African they see an enemy, a threat, not to “law and order” but to their privileges as whites.
I therefore, appeal to you to instruct your men not to give impossible commands to my people. The usual mumbling by a police of an order requiring people to disperse within three minutes, and almost immediately ordering a baton charge, deceives nobody and shows the police up as sadistic bullies. I sincerely hope that such actions will not occur this time. If the police are interested in maintaining “law and order,” they will have no difficulty at all. We will surrender ourselves to the police for arrest. If told to disperse, we will. But we cannot be expected to run helter-skelter because a trigger-happy, African-hating young white police officer has given hundreds of thousands of people three minutes within which to remove their bodies from [the] immediate environment.
Hoping you will cooperate to try and make this a most peaceful and disciplined campaign.
I remain
Yours faithfully,
Mangaliso R. Sobukwe
President
Pan Africanist Congress
PAC press release announcing
anti-pass campaign,
18 March 1960
CALL FOR POSITIVE ACTION
In accordance with a resolution adopted at our National Conference, held in Orlando on the 19th and 20th December, 1959, I have called on the African people to go with us into Positive Action against the Pass Laws. We launch our campaign on Monday, the 21st of March 1960, and circulars to that effect are already in the streets.
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- Information
- Lie on your WoundsThe Prison Correspondence of Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe, pp. 3 - 14Publisher: Wits University PressPrint publication year: 2019