Abstract

Abstract Why did leaders of the Congress movement in South Africa abandon their exclusive reliance on non-violent means in the struggle against apartheid, form an armed unit (Umkhonto we Sizwe), and launch a campaign of spectacular sabotage bombings of symbols of apartheid in 1961? None of the earlier violent struggles from which Congress leaders drew inspiration, and none of the contemporaneous insurgencies against white minority rule elsewhere in southern Africa, involved a similar distinct, preliminary and extended phase of non-lethal symbolic sabotage. Following the 1960 Sharpeville massacre, Congress leaders feared the social and political consequences of increased popular enthusiasm for using violence. Nelson Mandela, Joe Slovo, and the other founders of Umkhonto we Sizwe did not launch their sabotage campaign because they believed it would prompt a change of heart among white South Africans, nor because they believed urban sabotage bombings were a necessary prelude to the launch of rural guerrilla warfare. Rather, the sabotage campaign was a spectacular placeholder, a stopgap intended to advertise the Congress movement's abandonment of exclusive non-violence and thus to discourage opponents of apartheid, both inside and outside South Africa, from supporting rival groups or initiating ‘uncontrolled violent action themselves.

Highlights

  • SOUTH AFRICA*Before the 1960s, the African National Congress (ANC) and its allies were officially committed to the use of exclusively nonviolent means in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa

  • NUMBER 245 violent means and ‘turn to violence’ in 1961? In the past decade and a half, this question has become the subject of heated controversy amongst historians of South Africa

  • Before the 1960s, the African National Congress (ANC) and its allies were officially committed to the use of exclusively nonviolent means in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa

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Summary

SOUTH AFRICA*

Before the 1960s, the African National Congress (ANC) and its allies were officially committed to the use of exclusively nonviolent means in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa. In December 1961 a new organization, Umkhonto we Sizwe (‘Spear of the Nation’), announced its launch with a wave of bombings of unoccupied government installations In the manifesto they released at the time of these first attacks, the commanders of the new body declared that ‘The government policy of force, repression and violence will no longer be met with non-violent resistance only!’ Though Umkhonto (MK) described itself as a ‘new, independent body’, it had been founded by Nelson Mandela of the ANC and Joe Slovo of the South African Communist Party (SACP), with the authorization of both bodies.

PAST AND PRESENT
THE SABOTAGE CAMPAIGN
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