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South African Indian Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South African organisation

Not to be confused withSouth African Indian Council.

South African Indian Congress
PresidentUmar Hajee Ahmed Jhaveri
Founded1921
Merger ofNatal Indian Congress
Transvaal British Indian Association
Cape British Indian Council
IdeologyIndian interests
Gandhism
Anti-racism
Anti-Apartheid
Anti-imperialism
Socialism
Hindu-Muslim unity
Political positionLeft-wing
ReligionHinduism,Islam
National affiliationCongress Alliance(1950s)

TheSouth African Indian Congress (SAIC) was an umbrella body founded in 1921 to coordinate between political organisations representingIndians in the variousprovinces of South Africa. Its members were theNatal Indian Congress (NIC), theTransvaal Indian Congress (TIC), and, initially, the Cape British Indian Council. It advocatednon-violent resistance to discriminatory laws and in its formative years was strongly influenced by the NIC's founder,Mahatma Gandhi.

Although the SAIC's members operated with a great deal of autonomy, the SAIC had a particularly important political role in the 1950s, when it represented the NIC and TIC in fostering more cooperative relations with theAfrican National Congress. Pursuant to these efforts, the SAIC co-organised theDefiance Campaign andCongress of the People, and it became a signatory to theFreedom Charter and a member of theCongress Alliance.

Origins

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The three affiliates of the South African Indian Congress (SAIC) were theNatal Indian Congress (NIC), the Transvaal British Indian Association (later theTransvaal Indian Congress, TIC), and, during the congress's formative years, theCape British Indian Council (CBIC). Each of the three affiliates preceded SAIC, in the NIC's case by almost three decades. The CBIC had called repeatedly for a national conference of Indian organisations in 1917 and 1918, and such a conference was finally in the last week of January 1919 inCape Town. The conference was opened with a speech byJ. X. Merriman on 26 January.[1] Another national conference was held in 1920 and, at the third in 1921, it was decided formally to establish the SAIC as an umbrella body.Umar Hajee Ahmed Jhaveri was elected inaugural president of the SAIC.[1]

Over the next decade, the SAIC, like its affiliates, was a moderate and even conservative body; dominated by an elite class of South African Indians, its primary methods were petitions, deputations to the authorities, and appeals for help to the government of India, thenunder British control.[1][2] However, during the 1930s, the incumbent leadership was challenged by a group of younger activists, labelledradicals, who advocated for a more militant form ofnon-violent resistance to racist laws, as well as for cooperation with South Africa'sblack African majority.[2] Their influence grew until 1945–1946, when two of the radical leaders,Monty Naicker andYusuf Dadoo, were elected as the leaders of the NIC and TIC respectively.[1]

Opposition to the Ghetto Act

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In 1946, the SAIC, withMahatma Gandhi's support, resolved to protest theAsiatic Land Tenure and Indian Representation Act, which it nicknamed the Ghetto Act.[3] The NIC and TIC each established ad hoc committees – the NIC in March and the TIC in April – which organised a campaign ofpassive resistance against the law.[4] The campaign continued for two years, from June 1946 to June 1948, and involved the arrest of almost 2,000 protestors.[5] At the height of the campaign, the Indian government took up the SAIC's complaints in theGeneral Assembly of theUnited Nations; a SAIC delegation travelled toNew York to advise the effort. The Indian resolution was passed in December 1946.[2]Also during the course of the passive resistance campaign, in March 1947, the respective presidents of the two provincial congresses – Dadoo for the TIC and Naicker for the NIC – signed a joint declaration of co-operation withAlfred Xuma, the leader of theAfrican National Congress (ANC).[6] The document, nicknamed the Doctors' Pact because all three signatories were doctors, pledged "the fullest co-operation between the [black] African and Indian peoples".[5][2]

Opposition to apartheid

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In 1948, theNational Party came to power in South Africa on a platform of legislatingapartheid; in September that year, Naicker was elected as president of the SAIC.[1] In 1951, the ANC and SAIC jointly planned the 1952Defiance Campaign, with the SAIC's Yusuf Dadoo andYusuf Cachalia sitting on the planning council alongside the ANC'sJames Moroka,Walter Sisulu, andJ. B. Marks.[7] On the first day of the campaign on 26 June 1952, the ANC'sWalter Sisulu and TIC president Nana Sita led the first group ofJohannesburg volunteers to arrest inBoksburg.[7] In 1955, the SAIC, again with the ANC, was involved in organising theCongress of the People, at which it became a signatory of theFreedom Charter and a member of theCongress Alliance.[1][2] Several members of the SAIC and both of its provincial wings were charged in theTreason Trial that followed the Congress of the People.

Dormancy

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From 1960, the apartheid government embarked on an unprecedented programme to repress opposition groups in the aftermath of the 1960Sharpeville massacre. Though the SAIC and its affiliates were not banned by the government, many of its leading members facedbanning orders. Others were imprisoned for their activities inUmkhonto we Sizwe, an armed opposition group, or went into exile abroad to evade police harassment or join the exiledSouth African Communist Party. The SAIC and its affiliates fell into dormancy.[1]

The NIC was ultimately revived in 1971[8] and the TIC in 1983,[9] but the umbrella body was not formally revived. The provincial branches continued to work in partnership with each other, as well as independently and as affiliates of theUnited Democratic Front. Both the NIC and TIC again fell dormant after theend of apartheid in 1994, with most of their leading members joining the ANC.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^abcdefg"South African Indian Congress (SAIC)".South African History Online. 3 March 2011. Retrieved2 May 2023.
  2. ^abcdeKessel, Ineke; Southall, Roger; Soudien, Crain; Soske, Jon; Shubin, Vladimir; Saul, John; Nieftagodien, Noor; Netshitenzhe, Joel; Macmillan, Hugh (2012).One Hundred Years of the ANC: Debating liberation histories today. Wits University Press.ISBN 978-1-77614-287-3.
  3. ^Bagwandeen, Dowlat (1984)."Smuts and the 'Ghetto Act' of 1946: The Coup de Grace of Anti-Indian Legislation".Journal of Natal and Zulu History.7:57–73.doi:10.1080/02590123.1984.11964234.
  4. ^Desai, Ashwin (2013)."The 1946–1948 Passive Resistance Campaign in Natal, South Africa: Origins and Results".Journal of Natal and Zulu History.31 (2):54–67.doi:10.1080/02590123.2013.11964195.ISSN 0259-0123.
  5. ^abVahed, Goolam (1997)."The Making of "Indianess": Indian Politics in South Africa During the 1930s and 1940s".Journal of Natal and Zulu History.17 (1):1–36.doi:10.1080/02590123.1997.11964094.ISSN 0259-0123.
  6. ^"The Joint Declaration of Cooperation ("Three Doctors' Pact") is signed".South African History Online. 16 March 2011. Retrieved2 May 2023.
  7. ^abVahed, Goolam (2013).""Gagged and trussed rather securely by the law": The 1952 Defiance Campaign in Natal".Journal of Natal and Zulu History.31 (2):68–89.doi:10.1080/02590123.2013.11964196.ISSN 0259-0123.
  8. ^Vahed, Goolam; Desai, Ashwin (2 January 2014)."A case of 'strategic ethnicity'? The Natal Indian Congress in the 1970s".African Historical Review.46 (1):22–47.doi:10.1080/17532523.2014.911436.ISSN 1753-2523.
  9. ^"Transvaal Indian Congress (TIC)".South African History Online. 30 March 2011. Retrieved2 May 2023.

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