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Spartacist South Africa No. 13 |
Spring 2015 |
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Against the Nationalist Slanders of Marx and Engels
Recently we have increasingly been hearing the charge that
Marx and Engels were indifferent to the suffering and subjugation meted out by
the European colonialists and that the founders of scientific socialism
harboured racist views. This slanderous lie—long peddled by the Black
Consciousness Movement, Pan-Africanists and other nationalists—is particularly
common on university campuses. For instance, during our sub-drive campaign
amidst the “Rhodes Must Fall” protests, we frequently argued with students who
dismissed the ideas of Marx and Engels as inappropriate for the African context
simply because they were European (white). This is the logic of so-called
“intersectionality”—a view promoted by feminists, black nationalists and
reformist leftists, among others—according to which if you haven’t personally
experienced a particular form of oppression you can’t fight it. Such an
approach denies the possibility of mobilising the proletariat to champion the
cause of all the exploited and oppressed.
One proponent of this narrow nationalist anti-Marxist
slander is Jackie Shandu, a nationalist demagogue who is head of Policy,
Research and Political Education for the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) in
KwaZulu-Natal. In an opinion piece filled with distortions, inaccuracies and
outright lies, Shandu asserts: “In Marx, therefore, we are still dealing with a
white supremacist that believed and stated that the only way forward for all of
humanity is through Western intervention, paternalism and leadership” (“Battle
for the soul of the Economic Freedom Fighters: Class first or race first?”, Daily
Maverick, 18 December 2014).
What a load of crap! It truly beggars belief to claim that
Marx was a “white supremacist”. During the bloody Civil War of 1861-65 that
smashed slavery in the United States, Marx and Engels not only fully supported
the abolitionist cause, but also actively fought to mobilise the British
working class in support of a Northern victory. This effort contributed to
preventing the British bourgeoisie from intervening on the side of the Southern
Confederacy (the slave owners). Marx and Engels wrote extensively about the
Civil War, which they saw as one of the century’s major battles, a social
overturn and a harbinger of socialist revolutions to come. As Marx later wrote,
in Volume I of Capital, “every independent movement of the workers was
paralyzed so long as slavery disfigured a part of the Republic. Labour cannot
emancipate itself in the white skin where in the black it is branded.”
As for their attitude toward the bloody crimes of the
European colonialists, you just have to read Marx and Engels’ writings on the
suppression of the anti-British Sepoy rebellion in India to see that they were
anything but cheerleaders for colonial “paternalism”. For example, in May 1858,
Engels wrote an article denouncing the atrocities in Lucknow, where the British
army took the city, pillaged it, and then stole the land of the people they had
just conquered and massacred. In that article, Engels wrote: “The fact is,
there is no army in Europe or America with so much brutality as the British.
Plundering, violence, massacre … are a time-honored privilege, a vested right
of the British soldier.” Does that sound like indifference to colonial
subjugation?!
While Marx and Engels always condemned the monumental
crimes committed by the colonial powers against the peoples of Asia, Africa and
the Americas, they also initially held the view that colonial penetration of
such backward regions would be a vehicle for promoting their economic and
social modernisation. For example, in 1853 Marx wrote, “England has to fulfill
a double mission in India: one destructive, the other regenerating”. This view
turned out to be incorrect. History would subsequently show that even though
the advanced capitalist countries introduced certain elements of modern
industrial technology into their colonies and semicolonies, the overall effect
was to arrest the social and economic development of those areas.
Scientific socialism is based not on received wisdom but
on observation and analyses of social reality as it develops. Marx and Engels
learned from their observations, and would go on to develop a very different
attitude toward colonialism. Particularly important in prompting the change in
their views on the oppression of weak, backward states by stronger, more
advanced ones was the major role that Britain’s hold on Ireland played in
retarding the political consciousness of the English proletariat. By the 1870s,
they began to advocate independence for Ireland. An indication of their later
views on the colonial question is given by a letter that Engels wrote to Karl
Kautsky in 1882 (reprinted on page 17). In it, Engels points to the corrupting
influence of stolen colonial booty on the proletariat of the advanced
capitalist countries, and advocates independence for the colonies.
The most powerful refutation of the nationalists’ slanders
of Marx and Engels is seen, however, not in their own writings and political
activity, but in the revolutionary-internationalist legacy carried forward by
later Marxists. Above all, by the Bolsheviks under the leadership of V. I.
Lenin and Leon Trotsky, who led the working class to victory in the 1917
October Revolution. By ripping power out of the hands of the
capitalist-imperialists, the October Revolution blazed the way not only for the
proletariat of the West, but also the oppressed masses of the colonial world.
After taking power, the Bolsheviks put an end to Russia’s involvement in the
imperialist mass slaughter of World War I, and made public the secret treaties
and deals that the various European powers had made to carve up the world among
themselves. For example, in 1918 they published the Sykes-Picot treaty
outlining the division of the Near East between the British and French
imperialists.
These anti-imperialist acts were a concrete expression of
the understanding that revolutionary Marxists must champion the national
liberation of peoples subjugated by the advanced capitalist (imperialist)
powers, as a necessary part of the struggle to overthrow the imperialist rulers
through proletarian revolution from within. This understanding was hammered
home by Lenin and other leaders of the early Communist International
(Comintern), founded in 1919. For example, the “Twenty-One Conditions” adopted
at the Comintern’s Second Congress in 1920 demanded that the Communist parties
in the imperialist countries support “every liberation movement in the colonies
not only in words but in deeds”, and carry out “systematic propaganda among
their own country’s troops against any oppression of colonial peoples”. The
Theses on the National and Colonial Questions adopted at the same Congress
asserted the importance of “establishing the closest possible alliance between
the West-European communist proletariat and the revolutionary peasant movement
in the East, in the colonies, and in the backward countries generally”.
Compare this to the activities of the ANC and other
African nationalists of the time, who were busy sending endless deputations to
the British Queen and parliament, begging for this or that reform and all the
while reassuring them of the loyalty of “her majesty’s subjects” in Africa. For
example, the resolutions of the Second Pan-Africanist Congress, held in 1921 in
London, demanded not the dismantling of the colonialist structures, but merely
that “natives of Africa must have the right to participate in the [colonial]
government as fast as their development permits”. These nationalist movements
were not “revolutionary”, or even bourgeois-democratic, but rather advocated
that the educated and “civilised” African elite be given an opportunity to work
out with the imperialist powers a peaceful and ever-so-gradual transition from
colonialism to neo-colonialism. While these would-be exploiters sometimes tried
to mobilise popular support among the African toilers, their programme and
class standpoint were always fundamentally hostile to the interests of the
working people.
One just has to recall the saga of Kwame Nkrumah of
Ghana, an idol of Pan-Africanism and “African socialism”. When the Trade Union
Congress of Ghana prepared to call a 1950 General Strike in support of
Nkrumah’s slogan, “Self-Government NOW”, he vacillated and tried to postpone the
strike because he didn’t want to disrupt the negotiations with the colonial
authorities then under way. When self-government was finally granted, in 1957,
it was a “tidy” transition presided over by the colonial authorities, with the
explicit blessing of the Duchess of Kent (acting as Queen Elizabeth’s official
representative). After Nkrumah became Prime Minister of Ghana, the British
imperialists continued to get their cut, while the bourgeois-nationalist
government carried out a vicious anti-labour policy. In 1961, Nkrumah left his
vacation in the Soviet Union early to participate in the crushing of the 1961
General Strike.
The same goes for the would-be heirs of Nkrumah, like
Jackie Shandu and the EFF. Notwithstanding their rhetoric about “Marxism-Leninism”
(which they combine with the Third World nationalism of Fanon), these
self-declared “revolutionaries” seek to maintain capitalism and merely
renegotiate the terms of imperialist subordination with “white monopoly
capital” (with a bigger share of profits going to them and their cronies). For
instance, prior to the 2014 elections Julius Malema, commander-in-chief of the
EFF, invited investors to Alexandra township to assure them that their
investments won’t be touched when they get into government. Slandering Marx and
attacking Marxism is just the ideological expression of their class hostility
to the proletariat.
Shandu and the EFF’s anti-Marxist, anti-working-class
politics are combined with vicious nationalist demagogy in the service of the
very same racist divide-and-rule that was promoted by the British imperialists
and the apartheid rulers. Another one of Shandu’s recent opinion pieces (“A
volatile case of Afrikan vs. Indian in KwaZulu-Natal”, 7 April, Daily
Maverick) peddles anti-Indian poison under the guise of championing the
rights of black workers exploited by Indian bosses. In fact, the real aims of
Shandu and the EFF have nothing to do with fighting the exploitation of workers
at the hands of their bosses and everything to do with increasing the access of
small-time black capitalists to tenders and markets at the expense of their
Indian competitors. The same thing that animates outfits like the Mazibuye
African Forum (which includes members of the EFF and the ANC, as well as the
National Freedom Party, a split from Inkatha)—a black business forum that spews
poisonous anti-Indian racism and organises anti-Indian mobilisations in support
of the demand that Indians be excluded from access to BEE deals.
Among other distortions/lies peddled by the “economic
freedom fighter” Shandu, is the claim that the Communist Party of South African
(CPSA, the forerunner of the SACP) was “founded … under the slogan ‘White
Workers of the World Unite’” and that the Communists “never ‘problematised’
race and racism in the South African context”. Though founded by white
immigrant communists, the CPSA was not racist, as Shandu claims. Among its
pioneering central leaders were people like David Ivon Jones and Sidney
Percival Bunting, who were intransigent fighters against black oppression that
fought to recruit black communists. Both Bunting and Jones had earlier split
from the right-wing South African Labour Party (SALP) to form the International
Socialist League (ISL). They split in opposition to both the racism of the SALP
tops and their support for the imperialist First World War. At the First
Congress of the ISL in 1916, Bunting moved that the new party “affirm that the
emancipation of the working class requires the abolition of all forms of native
indenture, compound and passport systems; and the lifting of the native worker
to the political and industrial status of the white” (quoted in Allison Drew, Between
Empire and Revolution: A life of Sidney Bunting, 1873-1936). In 1919,
Bunting condemned the white trade unions for their racist indifference to black
workers, writing in The International: “It is humiliating to have to keep on
emphasising that the essence of the Labour movement is Solidarity, without
which it cannot win. The outstanding characteristic of the capitalist system in
South Africa being its Native labour, the outstanding movement of the country
must clearly be the movement of its Native labourers” (quoted in Edward Roux, S.P.
Bunting: A Political Biography).
The ISL founded the CPSA in 1920 when it resolved to
affiliate with the (Third) Communist International. Although people like Jones
and Bunting fought for the party to turn its face towards the black working
masses, other leaders of the early CPSA preferred an orientation toward the
white trade union movement and were loath to combat the racism of this
movement. In 1922, during the reactionary Rand Revolt strike, the Communist
Party capitulated to the racist demands of white miners for preserving the
colour bar in the mines. It was during this strike that the racist slogan of
“Workers of the World Fight and Unite for a White S.A.” was raised (though not
by the CPSA) amidst pogroms against blacks and Indians carried out by Afrikaner
Commandos. While he was critical of the strike, Bunting didn’t raise his criticisms
publicly during the strike. He rationalised their stance on the colour bar by
maintaining that the party should struggle for improved working conditions for
blacks.
In 1928, during the Sixth Congress of the Comintern, the
Communist Party adopted the “Native Republic” slogan at the urging of the
Comintern leadership. Although this slogan correctly pointed to the centrality
of the task of black emancipation in South Africa, it saw the “Native Republic”
as a capitalist republic, which was to be achieved as the first,
bourgeois-democratic, “stage” of the South African revolution. Only later (at
some unspecified time) was this supposed to be followed by a second, socialist,
“stage”. Thus, the slogan basically took the fight for proletarian revolution off
the agenda and instead cleared the way for the Communist Party to bury itself
in the ANC (for more, see “The Communist Party of South Africa from World War I
to the Sixth Congress”, in Spartacist South Africa No. 7, Winter 2011).
The fact that nationalist demagogues like Shandu and co.
are today able to retail their alternative versions of nationalism as some kind
of solution for the continued oppression of the black majority, is in no small
part thanks to the continued betrayals of the SACP (and COSATU) reformist
misleaders in pursuit of the Stalinist “two-stage” programme (called the
“National Democratic Revolution” in South Africa). The “first stage” came in
1994 with the ascension of the ANC-led Tripartite Alliance to power and the
establishment of a neo-apartheid system. As has been repeatedly demonstrated by
a long history of Stalinist betrayals of proletarian revolution—from the 1927
Shanghai massacre to the decimation of the millions-strong communist movement
of Indonesia in 1965—the “second stage” is not the socialist revolution but the
bloody massacre of the workers by their erstwhile nationalist “allies”, like in
the Marikana massacre of 2012.
Shandu, the EFF, and various other nationalists in the
Black Consciousness and Pan-Africanist traditions, may today denounce the
Marikana massacre and the ANC, but the reality is that the programmes they
pursue are fundamentally no different from that of the ANC. Witness the ease
with which the ANC has coopted a good chunk of the AZAPO and PAC leaderships since
1994. In contrast, we Trotskyists never gave any support to the ANC-led
Alliance, and told the truth in 1994, writing: “A vote for the ANC—including
its Communist Party members and affiliated trade-union leaders of COSATU—is a
vote to perpetuate the racist oppression and superexploitation of the black,
coloured (mixed-race) and Indian toilers in a different political form.” We
have a programme that points the way to the national liberation of the black
majority and all of the non-white toilers through smashing neo-apartheid
capitalism, establishing a black-centred workers government, and fighting like
hell for the international extension of the revolution to the advanced
capitalist countries. We fight for the political independence of the
proletariat from all bourgeois parties—whether the ANC or EFF,
PAC or AZAPO, or any other.
This programme is an application of Trotsky’s theory of
permanent revolution to the specific conditions of South African capitalism,
with its combined and uneven development and heavy overlap of racial oppression
with class oppression. It represents a continuation of genuine Marxism. For
this reason, we fight to politically smash the nationalist slanders of Marx and
Engels, and to arm all those who want to get rid of racist capitalist
exploitation with the political and theoretical weapons they left us.
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