Walter Sisulu | |
|---|---|
Sisulu in 1991 | |
| 5th Deputy President of the African National Congress | |
| In office 7 July 1991 – 20 December 1994 | |
| President | Nelson Mandela |
| Preceded by | Nelson Mandela |
| Succeeded by | Thabo Mbeki |
| 9th Secretary-General of the African National Congress | |
| In office 1949–1955 | |
| President | |
| Preceded by | James Calata |
| Succeeded by | Oliver Tambo |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Walter Max Ulyate Sisulu (1912-05-18)18 May 1912 |
| Died | 5 May 2003(2003-05-05) (aged 90) Soweto, South Africa |
| Political party | African National Congress |
| Other political affiliations | South African Communist Party (Tripartite Alliance) |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 5, includingMax,Mlungisi,Zwelakhe, andLindiwe |
| Occupation |
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| Awards |
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Walter Max Ulyate Sisulu (18 May 1912 – 5 May 2003) was aSouth Africananti-apartheid activist and member of theAfrican National Congress (ANC). Between terms as ANC Secretary-General (1949–1954) and ANC Deputy President (1991–1994), he was Accused No.2 in theRivonia Trial and was incarcerated onRobben Island where he served more than 25 years' imprisonment for his anti-Apartheid revolutionary activism. He had a close partnership withOliver Tambo andNelson Mandela, with whom he played a key role in organising the 1952Defiance Campaign and the establishment of theANC Youth League andUmkhonto we Sizwe. He was also on theCentral Committee of theSouth African Communist Party.[1][2]
Walter Sisulu was born in 1912 in the town ofNgcobo in theUnion of South Africa, part of what is now theEastern Cape province (then theTranskei). As was not unusual for his generation in South Africa, he was uncertain of his birthday, but celebrated it on 18 May.[3][4] His mother, Alice Mase Sisulu, was aXhosadomestic worker and his father, Albert Victor Dickinson, was awhite civil servant andmagistrate. Dickinson did not play a part in his son's upbringing: Sisulu reportedly met him only once, in the 1940s, before he died in the 1970s.[5] Sisulu and his sister, Rosabella, were raised by his mother's family, who were descended from theThembu clan. He was close with his uncle, Dyantyi Hlakula, who was passionate about Xhosa culture and who oversaw hisinitiation.[5][6] Although he was technically ofmixed race, Sisulu identified strongly asblack and as Xhosa.[3][6]
In his mid-teens, Sisulu left school – anAnglicanmission school – to find work.[3] InJohannesburg, he worked a range of jobs, including as a bank teller, gold miner, domestic worker, and baker.[3][6] He was fired from the bakery for trying toorganise his co-workers.[4][6]
He founded Sitha Investments in 1939. It was situated at Barclay Arcade between West Street and Commissioner Street in thebusiness district ofJohannesburg. Its objective was to help black andIndian people buy houses. During its operations, Sitha was the only black-owned real estate agency in South Africa.
Sisulu was one of the first ANC leaders to push for a non-racial alliance, leading to cooperation with white and Indian activists like Joe Slovo and Ahmed Kathrada. His work laid the groundwork for the “Rainbow Nation” ideal.
In 1940, Sisulu joined theAfrican National Congress (ANC), which had been founded in the year of his birth.[8] The following year,Nelson Mandela moved to Johannesburg and was introduced to Sisulu, who by then was well connected among the city's activist class. Sisulu later said, ''I had no hesitation, the moment I met him, that this is the man I need" – the man, that is, "for leading the African people".[3] Sisulu encouraged Mandela to join the ANC, occasionally contributed to his law school tuition, and introduced him to his first wife,Evelyn Mase, who was Sisulu's maternal relative.[3][6]
In 1943, together with Mandela andOliver Tambo, he joined theANC Youth League, founded byAnton Lembede, of which Sisulu was initially the treasurer. He later distanced himself from Lembede, who died in 1947, had ridiculed his parentage.
The Youth League's drive for a more militant posture was given further fuel in 1948, when theNational Party (NP) wonnational elections on a platform of legislatingapartheid. In December 1949, at the ANC's 38thNational Conference, the Youth League leadership carried out a "remarkable putsch", which successfully installed several younger and more militant members onto the party'sNational Executive Committee – including Sisulu, who was elected ANCSecretary-General.[9][10] The League also tabled a broad Programme of Action, which was notable for its explicit emphasis onAfrican nationalism andmass mobilisation techniques.[9] The culmination of this new strategy was the 1952Defiance Campaign ofpassive resistance. Sisulu was on the planning council for the campaign and was arrested for his participation.[11] In December, he and other organisers, including ANC PresidentJames Moroka, were found guilty of "statutory communism" under the remarkably broadSuppression of Communism Act, but had their sentences – nine months' imprisonment withhard labour –suspended for two years.[12]
Sisulu, along with several others, formed part of an ANC delegation to the 1953 World Democratic Youth meeting inBucharest, Romania; before returning to South Africa, the group also travelled toWarsaw, Poland, to London, to Israel, and to thePeople's Republic of China, where Sisulu was part of a meeting with theChinese Communist Party leadership.[13] In 1955, Sisulu, Mandela, andAhmed Kathrada watched theCongress of the People gathering – which adopted theFreedom Charter – from a nearby rooftop, unable to attend the meeting because of thebanning orders against them.[13] By this time, Sisulu was active not only in the ANC but also, covertly, in theSouth African Communist Party (SACP).[13]
Paul Landau, a historian of the ANC, has argued that Sisulu and Mandela were the crucial forces, both intellectually and practically, behind the ANC's "turn to violence" (that is, to armed struggle against the government) at the turn of the decade.[13] WhenUmkhonto we Sizwe was established in 1961, Sisulu served on its High Command.[14]
After 1952, he was jailed seven times in the next ten years, including five months in 1960, and was held under house arrest in 1962. At theTreason Trial (1956–1961), he was eventually sentenced to six years, but was released on bail pending his appeal.
He went underground in 1963, resulting in his wife,Albertina Sisulu, becoming the first woman to be arrested under the so-called 90 Day Act, the General Laws Amendment Act of 1963, which allowed the state to detain suspects for up to 90 dayswithout charging them.[15]
He was caught atRivonia on 11 July, along withGovan Mbeki,Ahmed Kathrada and 14 others. At the conclusion of theRivonia Trial, Sisulu was sentenced to life imprisonment on 12 June 1964. Part of his testimony during the trial included the commitment:
I wish to make this solemn vow in full appreciation of the consequences it entails. As long as I enjoy the confidence of my people, and as long as there is a spark of life and energy in me, I shall fight with courage and determination for the abolition of discriminatory laws and for the freedom of all South Africans irrespective of colour or creed.[4]
With other senior ANC figures, Sisulu served the majority of his sentence onRobben Island, though he was later transferred toPollsmoor Prison. His wife,Albertina Sisulu, was frequently under banning orders – the first from 1964 to 1969 – which prevented her from travelling toCape Town to visit him.[15]
As part of the prelude to thenegotiations to end apartheid, Sisulu and other Rivonia Trial defendants were released from prison on 15 October 1989; Sisulu was 77.[16] His return to Soweto was greeted with celebrations in the street,[16] and he told media of his long detention, "It was not possible to despair because the spirit of the people outside was too great".[6] In 1990, he formed part of the ANC delegation to the negotiations with the government which resulted in theGroote Schuur Minute.[17] In July 1991, at the ANC'sfirst national conference since its unbanning the year before, Sisulu was elected ANC Deputy President. It was believed that he had been convinced to accept the job in order to prevent a disruptive power struggle between a younger generation of activists – such asCyril Ramaphosa,Thabo Mbeki, andChris Hani – vying for the deputy presidency.[8][18] After 1994, Walter Sisulu chose not to take a formal position in Mandela’s government, preferring to stay behind the scenes. He believed his role was to support, not seek personal power.
In 1994, the ANC won a majority in South Africa'sfirst democratic elections and formeda government headed by Mandela, but Sisulu, weakened by age and his long imprisonment, declined to serve in public office. At the ANC's49th National Conference in December that year, he also declined to run for re-election to the party's leadership.[3] After his retirement, he and his family continued to live in Soweto, where they had lived before the Rivonia Trial.[4] Walter Sisulu died on May 5, 2003—exactly 29 years after the death of ANC founder Dr. Alfred Xuma, a man who had once mentored him. This poetic historical overlap added symbolic weight to his legacy.
Sisulu died at his home in Linden,Johannesburg on the evening of 5 May 2003, just shy of his 91st birthday,[19] in the presence of his wife.[6] He was given a "special official funeral" on 17 May 2003.[20] Among the tributes he received after his death, Mandela – joking that both he and Sisulu "had long passed the age when either of us would protest against the brevity of life" – said:
Our paths first intersected in 1941. During the past 62 years our lives have been intertwined. We shared the joy of living, and the pain. Together we shared ideas, forged common commitments. We walked side by side through the valley of death, nursing each other's bruises, holding each other up when our steps faltered. Together we savoured the taste of freedom. From the moment when we first met he has been my friend, my brother, my keeper, my comrade.[21]
After Mandela's death in 2013,Mac Maharaj – who had been on Robben Island with both men and later became a cabinet minister – told the media that he had had Sisulu and Mandela write obituaries for each other before 2003, and had kept both.[22]
His admirers, including Mandela, frequently noted his humility.[23] Those imprisoned with him on Robben Island remarked upon his unflappable calm and patience[6] – as Mandela put it inhis autobiography, "He was often silent when others were shouting."[3] After his release from prison, according to theLos Angeles Times, Sisulu "was always a voice for moderation, preaching the importance of a national reconciliation".[6] Upon his death, Kathrada told theNew York Times:
I've always said that one can't speak of Mandela without speaking of Sisulu. They complement each other... Mandela was highly respected, highly admired. But I would not be able to say he was as loved as Sisulu was. You know that difference between a father and a leader? That was the big difference between them.[3]
In 1944, Sisulu marriedAlbertina, a nurse, whom he had met in 1942 in Johannesburg;[24] Mandela was hisbest man at their wedding.[6] At the ceremony, Lembede warned Albertina: "You are marrying a man who is already married to the nation."[4][25] Sisulu later recalled, "Even when I married my wife, I told her it was useless buying new furniture. I was going to be in jail."[24] While he was in prison, Albertina became a very important anti-apartheid activist in her own right, with leadership roles in theUnited Democratic Front andFederation of South African Women. In 1982,Ruth First paid tribute to their marriage at an ANC celebration for Walter (in absentia) on his birthday, saying: "His capacity to lead and her political strength are... the product of a good marriage, a good political marriage, but a good marriage, one that is based on genuine equality and on shared commitment."[24] Both were born intoChristian families, but, asked in 1992 whether they practised their religion, Albertina replied: "There’s no time, my dear."[26]
Together, the couple had five children:Max (born 1945), an ANC politician;Mlungisi, a businessman (born 1948, died 2015);[27]Zwelakhe, a journalist (born 1950, died 2012);[28][29]Lindiwe (born 1954), also an ANC politician; and Nonkululeko (born 1958).[24][30] They alsoadopted three children: two –Beryl, a diplomat, and Gerald Lockman[31] – are biologically the children of Walter's deceased sister; while the third, Jongumzi, is the son of Sisulu's cousin.[24] Jongi served a five-year sentence on Robben Island for his anti-apartheid activism in the 1980s, and other family members were also periodically detained.[24][32]
In 2002, Max's wife,Elinor, published a biography of her parents-in-law, entitledWalter and Albertina Sisulu: In Our Lifetime.[33][34]
In 1992, Sisulu was awardedIsitwalandwe Medal, the highest honour granted by the ANC, for his contribution to the liberation struggle in South Africa. The government of India awarded him thePadma Vibhushan in 1998.
In 2004, Sisulu was ranked 33rd onSABC 3's list ofGreat South Africans. TheWalter Sisulu National Botanic Garden,Walter Sisulu University andWalter Sisulu Local Municipality are named after him.