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Joe Slovo

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Joe Slovo
Minister of Housing of South Africa
In office
April 1994 – January 1995
PresidentNelson Mandela
Preceded byNew post
National Executive Committee member of the African National Congress
PresidentNelson Mandela
General Secretary of the South African Communist Party
In office
1984–1991
Succeeded byChris Hani
Commander of uMkhonto we Sizwe
PresidentOliver Tambo
Preceded byNelson Mandela
Succeeded byChris Hani
Personal details
Born
Yossel Mashel Slovo

(1926-05-23)23 May 1926
Obeliai, Lithuania
Died6 January 1995(1995-01-06) (aged 68)
Johannesburg, South Africa
Political partyAfrican National Congress
South African Communist Party
Spouses
(m. 1949; died 1982)
Helena Dolny
(m. 1987)
Military service
AllegianceUnion of South Africa
African National Congress
Branch/serviceSouth African Army
uMkhonto we Sizwe
Years of service1941–1945
1963–1990
Battles/warsSecond World War
Internal resistance to apartheid
Rhodesian Bush War
Angolan Civil War
South African Border War

Yossel Mashel Slovo (23 May 1926 – 6 January 1995), commonly known as Joe Slovo, was a South African politician, and an opponent of the apartheid system. A Marxist-Leninist, he was a long-time leader and theorist in the South African Communist Party (SACP), a leading member of the African National Congress (ANC), and a commander of the ANC's military wing uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK). Slovo was a delegate to the multiracial Congress of the People of June 1955 which drew up the Freedom Charter. He was imprisoned for six months in 1960, and emerged as a leader of uMkhonto we Sizwe the following year. He lived in exile from 1963 to 1990, conducting operations against the apartheid régime from the United Kingdom, Angola, Mozambique, and Zambia. In 1990, he returned to South Africa, and took part in the negotiations that ended apartheid. He became known for proposing the "sunset clauses" covering the 5 years following a democratic election, including guarantees and concessions to all sides,[1] and his fierce non-racialist stance. After the elections of 1994, he became Minister for Housing in Nelson Mandela's government. He died of cancer in 1995.[2]

Life

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Slovo was born on 23 May 1926 in Obeliai, Lithuania, to a Jewish family that emigrated to the Union of South Africa when he was eight. His father worked as a truck driver in Johannesburg. Although his family were religious, he became an atheist who retained respect for "the positive aspects of Jewish culture".[3] Slovo was educated at King Edward VII School[citation needed] and left school in 1941 and found work as a dispatch clerk.[4] He joined the National Union of Distributive Workers and, as a shop steward, was involved in organising a strike.

Slovo joined the South African Communist Party in 1942. Inspired by the Red Army's battles against the Nazis on the Eastern Front of World War II, Slovo volunteered to fight in the war. He served as a Signaler in combat operations for the South African forces in North Africa and Italy, and on his return to South Africa he joined the Springbok Legion, a multiracial radical ex-servicemen's organization.[5][6]

Between 1946 and 1950 he completed a law degree at the University of the Witswatersrand and was a student activist. He was in the same class as Nelson Mandela and Harry Schwarz. In 1949 he married Ruth First, another prominent Jewish anti-apartheid activist and the daughter of SACP treasurer Julius First. They had three daughters, Shawn, Gillian and Robyn. Ruth First was assassinated in 1982 in Maputo, by order of Craig Williamson, a major in the South African Police.[7]

In 1950, the SACP was banned and both First and Slovo were listed as communists under the Suppression of Communism Act and could not be quoted or attend public gatherings in South Africa. He became active in the South African Congress of Democrats (an ally of the ANC as part of the Congress Alliance) and was a delegate to the June 1955 Congress of the People organised by the ANC and Indian, Coloured and white organisations at Kliptown near Johannesburg, that drew up the Freedom Charter. He was arrested and detained for two months during the Treason Trial of 1956. Charges against him were dropped in 1958. He was later arrested for six months during the State of Emergency declared after the Sharpeville massacre in 1960.

Plaque in Camden Town

In 1961, Slovo and Abongz Mbede emerged as two of the leaders of uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK), the military wing of the ANC, formed in alliance between the ANC and the SACP. In 1963 he went into exile and lived in Britain, Angola, Mozambique and Zambia. In his capacity as chief of staff of MK he codetermined its activities, like the 1983 Church Street bombing.[8] In 1982, Slovo's wife, Ruth First was assassinated in Maputo, Mozambique, where the couple lived in exile. In 1984, Slovo, an ANC and SACP member, was forced to leave Mozambique in terms of the Nkomati Accord between the Marxist People's Republic of Mozambique and apartheid South Africa.[9] In 1984, he was elected general secretary of the SACP in Lusaka, Zambia, and in 1985, he became the first white member of the ANC's national executive.

Slovo was a leading theoretician in both the SACP and the ANC. In the 1970s he wrote the influential essay "South Africa: No Middle Road", which argued that the apartheid government would be unable to achieve stability, co-opt significant sections of the small but growing black middle class, or democratise: the only choice was between an insurrectionary overthrow of apartheid, centred on MK, or even greater repression.[10]

At the time the SACP's orthodox pro-Soviet and two-stage view of change in South Africa – "national democratic revolution" first, socialism later – was dominant in the ANC-led liberation movement. Slovo's 1988 "The South African Working Class and the National Democratic Revolution" defended the two-stage conception, insisting that "national democratic revolution" would "implement economic measures which go far beyond bourgeois-democracy" and so "erect a favourable framework for a socialist transformation but will not, in themselves, create, or necessarily lead to, socialism".[11]

In 1989, he wrote "Has Socialism Failed?" which acknowledged the weaknesses of the socialist movement and the excesses of Stalinism, while at the same time rejecting attempts by the left to distance themselves from socialism. Slovo insisted on having a "justified confidence in the future of socialism and its inherent moral superiority", and pointing to "the failures of capitalism", although he now rejected the one-party state model.[12]

In May 1990, after 27 years of exile, Slovo returned to the country[13] to participate in the early "talks about talks" between the government and the ANC. Ailing, he stood down as SACP general secretary in 1991 and was given the titular position of SACP chairperson. Slovo was succeeded by Chris Hani, who was assassinated two years later by a white right-winger. Slovo was a long-demonised figure in white South African society, widely misrepresented as a KGB colonel or Russian secret agent, and attracted a great deal of press after his return.[14]

In 1992, Slovo secured a major breakthrough in the negotiations to end apartheid in South Africa by presenting the "sunset clauses" developed by the ANC/ SACP leadership: a coalition government for five years following democratic elections, guarantees for civil servants, including the homelands and armed forces, and an amnesty process. These were intended to head off right-wing coups and destabilisation. However, Slovo specifically rejected any compromise on full majority rule, and any agreement that "constitutionally prevented permanently" a new government "from effectively intervening to advance the process of redressing the racially accumulated imbalances in all spheres of life".[15]

Slovo was a harsh critic of Israel, which he viewed as an apartheid state, and has been described among "people who want to see justice in struggles wherever they are fought".[16]

After the elections of 1994, Slovo became Minister for housing in Nelson Mandela's government, until his death in 1995 of cancer. His funeral was attended by the entire high command of the ANC, and by most of the highest officials in the country, including both Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki, and he was buried in Avalon Cemetery, Soweto, which was unheard of for a white South African. 50,000 people, virtually all black, attended the event.[17]

The grave of Joe Slovo in Avalon Cemetery, Soweto

Civic and similar tributes

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In 2004 Slovo was voted 47th in the Top 100 Great South Africans. Shack settlements built on land occupations in both Durban and Cape Town were named after Joe Slovo by their founders. Harrow Road in Johannesburg and Field Street in Durban Central were renamed Joe Slovo Drive and Joe Slovo Street respectively.[18] A newly constructed Residence building at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa, has been named "Joe Slovo" in honour of the man.[19] The Congress of South African Trade Unions, the largest union federation in South Africa, and an ally of the ANC and SACP, helps organise the annual Joe Slovo Memorial Lecture[20] and normally issues a statement on the anniversary of his death.[21] Slovo was widely admired across southern Africa, leading Zimbabwean magazine, Southern African Political and Economic Monthly running a special issue on his death, and describing Slovo in an obituary as a "liberation war hero" and "African patriot" completely immersed in the struggle for black freedom.[17]

Cinema and music

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Joe Slovo appears as a character in two films for which his daughter Shawn Slovo wrote the screenplay. In the award-winning 1988 movie A World Apart, he is depicted as "Gus Roth" (played by Jeroen Krabbé). He is played by Malcolm Purkey in the 2006 film Catch A Fire.


References

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  1. ^ "Negotiations: What room for compromise?". www.sacp.org.za. Archived from the original on 12 May 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  2. ^ Joe Slovo, Anti-Apartheid Stalinist, Dies at 68, NY Times, 1995-01-07.
  3. ^ "OBITUARY: Joe Slovo". The Independent. 7 January 1995. Archived from the original on 9 June 2022.
  4. ^ Cobbett, William (March 1995). "Obituary: Joe Slovo: Mensch". Review of African Political Economy. 22 (63): 95–97. doi:10.1080/03056249508704103. JSTOR 4006277.
  5. ^ Slovo, Joe, and Nelson Mandela (Contributor). Slovo: The Unfinished Autobiography of ANC Leader Joe Slovo. Ocean Press, 1997. ISBN 1-875284-95-8, ISBN 978-1-875284-95-5. p. 45.
  6. ^ Loveland, Ian. By Due Process of Law: Racial Discrimination and the Right to Vote in South Africa, 1855–1960. Hart Publishing, 1999. ISBN 1-84113-049-4, ISBN 978-1-84113-049-1. p. 252.
  7. ^ "Ruth First: Williamson given amnesty". Independent Online (South Africa). 1 June 2000. Retrieved 8 April 2009.
  8. ^ "SAPA – 12 May 97 – TAMBO ORDERED CHURCH STREET BLAST: ANC". www.justice.gov.za. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  9. ^ Slovo, Gillian. Every Secret Thing: My Family, My Country. Little, Brown and Co. pp. 130–131.
  10. ^ Slovo, Joe (1976). "South Africa – No Middle Road". In Davidson, Basil; Slovo, Joe; Wilkinson, Anthony R. (eds.). Southern Africa: The Politics of Revolution.
  11. ^ Slovo, Joe (1988). "The South African Working Class and the National Democratic Revolution". South African Communist Party. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  12. ^ Slovo, Joe (1989). "Has Socialism Failed?". South African Communist Party. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  13. ^ Hedges, Chris (17 October 1990). "Old Marxist Returns, With Hope for South Africa". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
  14. ^ Gillian, Slovo (1997). Every Secret Thing: My Family, My Country. Little, Brown and Co. pp. 134–135.
  15. ^ Slovo, Joe. "Negotiations: What room for compromise?". South African Communist Party. Archived from the original on 12 May 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  16. ^ "South African divisions exposed by Israel-Hamas conflict". 7 November 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  17. ^ a b "Editorial: Joe Slovo – An African Patriot". Southern African Political and Economic Monthly. 8 (5): 3. February 1995.
  18. ^ "Joe Slovo". www.durban.gov.za. Archived from the original on 6 April 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  19. ^ University, Rhodes. "Discover our Halls of Residence". Archived from the original on 24 January 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  20. ^ "Invitation to the media to CHI Memorial Lecture". www.cosatu.org.za. Archived from the original on 26 January 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  21. ^ "COSATU statement on the commemoration of the 22nd Anniversary of the death of Cde Joe Slovo". www.cosatu.org.za. Archived from the original on 25 January 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
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Party political offices
Preceded by General Secretary of the South African Communist Party
1984–1991
Succeeded by