Of Champions And Martyrs
by Paul Buhle
Book Review
Ruth First and Joe Slovo in the War Against Apartheid, by Alan Wieder, Foreword by Nadine Gordimer. New York: Monthly Review Press, 2013, 356pp, ISBN 978-1583673560, $23.95 paperback.
(Swans - November 18, 2013)
This remarkable book bears the tale of two South African (white)
Communists who threw their lives into the cause of overthrowing the
tyrannical system so effectively supported by the U.S. and Israel (among
others) until the veritable end. To say they were courageous is a vast
understatement. They were prepared to die, a hundred times over, and
they suffered all manner of persecution over the decades. Today, people
in South Africa with historical sense regard them as champions and
martyrs.
Outside of South Africa and the networks of anti-Apartheid activists now
aging, most especially in the U.S., they are more likely to be
forgotten or treated as a mere discrepancy in the upward march of
freedom (that is, meritocracy), anti-American to boot. But world-famous
Nadine Gordimer, one of the small crew of revolutionary novelists at the
top rank of living literary figures in any language, is among the
rememberers.
We learn from here, in the condensed version of what is to follow, that
the two were Jewish, Joe a military veteran of the anti-fascist war when
they met. The war had produced a wave of anti-fascism with an
anti-racist undertone, and it made sense to be a Communist as well as an
ardent supporter of the African National Congress. Joe was a
proletarian of Lithuanian immigrant parents, Ruth a typical middle class
South African Jew who, however, had a college affair with a rebel of
Indian origins. By the time Ruth and Joe connected, they were deeply
into Communist politics. There hangs a tale.
Much as in the U.S., the postwar South African Communist Party (SACP)
was under terrific government pressure, but unlike the U.S., the SACP
dissolved, with hardly more sense than American Communist leaders had of
what it meant to go underground in a society with a formal democratic
structure, elections, and so on. Black South Africans actually rushed to
join, the movement was effectively transformed, and the left's future
set, it seemed, on anti-capitalism joined to anti-racism. Ruth and Joe
sunk all their energies into making it turn out that way.
The number of projects they engaged, some legal, some illegal, the
people they worked with (including top African National Congress
leaders, Nelson Mandela among them), the complications and
contradictions of the SACP's loyalty to Moscow -- these are beyond the
scope of any reasonably-sized book review. Suffice it to say there was
nothing easy for the couple put on trial for treason in 1956, prosecuted
by a near-Nazi, and despised as Jews hardly less than as anti-racist
Communists. The Party re-emerged, they beat the rap, faced new
crackdowns with courage and resolve, and life went on. Ruth went into
exile in 1964, as alternatives narrowed, joining Joe in London and
setting themselves upon another phase of struggle: the protest and
support movements from abroad. Much of Joe's work turned out to be
clandestine, with meetings in various places, sometimes Moscow. Ruth
would teach at Durham University, and become a theorist as well as a
scholar of note, sometimes reaching wide popular audiences (The Barrel of a Gun,
about coups in Africa, was read from continent to continent). Joe was
ever the strategist, and the training of cadres to return to illegal
work in South Africa was naturally his. She paid the heavier price:
assassinated in 1982 in Mozambique. Almost certainly, the CIA had a hand
in providing intelligence to the South African murderers.
In the end, of course, the collapse of the East Bloc allowed US leaders
to accept and even press for a post-Apartheid government with longtime
collaborators with Communists at its apex. The AFL-CIO, ever
collaborating with the CIA (this eased after the overthrow of the
longtime leadership in 1995, but only to a degree), typified the
strategy of the West, separating South African labor leaders from their
membership with temptations of all kinds, fame to riches. The choice
between compromise and bloodbath, in any case, was made carefully, after
much discussion, Joe in particular part of the discussion. To say the
outcome has been bitter is too simple. As housing minister in the new
government, Joe, the undaunted Communist, continued the march to
democracy. He was hailed at his funeral in 1995 by Nelson Mandela and a
host of ANC officials, buried in the Soweto cemetery along with only one
other white South African.
The telling of their story is an achievement for which author Alan
Wieder deserves great credit. Writing as an oral history field worker
and teacher, I conclude that the book could not have been done by
someone who lacked the skill and patience of an oral historian such as
Wieder. The entirety of this book has the personal touch and will reward
reading and rereading.
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