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Congress of the People (1955)

Coordinates:26°16′39″S27°53′20″E / 26.27750°S 27.88889°E /-26.27750; 27.88889
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meeting of anti-apartheid activists and organisations in South Africa
See also:Freedom Charter

TheCongress of the People was a gathering organised by the National Action Council, a multi-racial organisation which later became known as theCongress Alliance, and held inKliptown on 26 June 1955 to lay out the vision of theSouth African people. TheFreedom Charter was drawn up at the gathering, which was statement of core principles of the Alliance and a symbol ofinternal resistance againstapartheid.

Background

[edit]

In 1953 prominent black academicZ. K. Matthews proposed that a "Congress of the People" be organised to gather and document the wishes of the people. Organising committees were set up across South Africa.[1] A call was sent out to the people of South Africa by the group later known as the Congress Alliance for proposals for the content of a freedom charter concerning issues such as land, industry, human rights, education, and law.[2]: 677  Proposals were received in the form of local demands, in the form of new constitutions, as documents and scraps of papers and these proposals were then developed by a sub-committee into a draft document that could be debated at a future Congress of the People.[2]: 677 

On 23 June 1955, executives of the ANC, theSouth African Indian Congress (SAIC), theSouth African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU), the Coloured People's Congress (CPC) and theSouth African Congress of Democrats (COD) met inTongaat. This group, who later became known as the Congress Alliance, developed the document known as theFreedom Charter and planned a large multi-racial gathering to be held over two days atKliptown on 26 June 1955, where it was intended that the Charter be ratified after being read out and discussed.[3]

The draft proposal for the Charter was presented to each delegate when they arrived inJohannesburg for the Congress.[4]: 79  The delegates were elected from rural and urban areas, elected by their communities or organisations with funds raised locally to get their representatives to Johannesburg. Where this was not possible, delegates from communities already present in the city were found.[4]: 79 

26 June 1955

[edit]

The Congress of the People, consisting of around 3,000 people, gathered in Kliptown, part ofSoweto (a largetownship outside Johannesburg) on 26 June 1955 in a field surrounded by chicken-wire to give it a lawful claim of being a private gathering,[5][6] so that it was not prevented from assembling by the South African government.[5] The delegates came from all parts of the country, arriving in Johannesburg via car, bus, bicycle, by foot and horseback.[4]: 79  The majority of the people in the gathering wereblack South Africans, with hundreds ofIndian South Africans,whites and so-called "Coloureds".[5][3]

The object of the Congress was to adopt a Freedom Charter representing the aspirations of South Africans of all races.[5] The aim was to have a lead speaker present each section of the proposed charter and to open the section to general discussion and debate by the gathering.[2]: 677  This did not happen due to the intervention by the government, and each section was instead agreed to, but not by general discussion.[2]: 677 Albert Luthuli,Yusuf Dadoo andFather Trevor Huddleston were all honoured with the ANC's highest honour,Isitwalandwe, but only Huddleston was able to receive his, the other two being subject tobanning orders issued by the government.[3]The Congress concluded on 27 June, when the gathering was surrounded by theSouth African Police and broken up.[6] They made several arrests, confiscated documents and photographed the delegates.[6]

Ratification of the Charter

[edit]

The last aim of the Congress was to collect a million signatures by 26 June 1956 to acknowledge the creation of the Freedom Charter.[6] A quota of signatures was decided upon with the following required from each province:Transvaal 450,000;Cape Province 350,000;Natal 150,000 and theOrange Free State 50,000.[6] The delegates then returned home to report back to their communities or organisations to spread the adoption of the Freedom Charter.[4]: 80 

By the end of 1955, 156 leading Congress Alliance activists were arrested and tried for treason in the1956 Treason Trial; the Charter itself was used as evidence and eventually declared illegal.[2]

Significance of the event

[edit]

The Congress of the People led to the Congress movement assuming a fully non-racial character for the first time. From this people's meeting and Charter was born a truly national liberation movement with the aim of a complete social transformation, requiring a radical restructuring of all aspects of South African society.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Goldberg, Denis (2016).A Life for Freedom. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 43–44.
  2. ^abcde"The Freedom Charter (With a Note by Hilda Bernstein)".Third World Quarterly.9 (2):672–677. April 1987.doi:10.1080/01436598708419993.JSTOR 3991903.
  3. ^abc"The Freedom Charter is adopted in Kliptown: Sunday, 26 June 1955".South African History Online. 22 June 2018.Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved17 March 2019.
  4. ^abcdSuttner, Raymond (1985). "The Freedom Charter: The People's Charter in the 1980s".Crime and Social Justice (24):72–95.JSTOR 3991903.
  5. ^abcd"Congress of the People Held in South Africa".Africa Today.2 (3): 10. July 1955.JSTOR 4183718.
  6. ^abcde"The Kliptown Conference".Africa Today.2 (4): 6. September 1955.JSTOR 4183735.
  7. ^"Significance of the Congress of the People and the Freedom Charter".South African History Online. 4 August 2016.Archived from the original on 31 July 2020. Retrieved17 March 2019.

26°16′39″S27°53′20″E / 26.27750°S 27.88889°E /-26.27750; 27.88889

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