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Title: Worker-Student Alliances
Author: Leroy Maisiri
Date: October 30, 2016
Language: en
Topics: workers, students, South Africa
Source: Retrieved on 10th December 2021 from http://anarkismo.net/article/29722
Notes: First published in South African Labour Bulletin, volume 40, number 4, pp. 39–40.

Leroy Maisiri

Worker-Student Alliances

After 20 years of neo-liberal democracy, South Africa has not truly

begun the much-needed purge of race and class structural inequalities

and constraints inherited from apartheid South Africa. Many university

campuses across the country, since 2015, have been set alight by the

actions of a non-compromising body of students. This political wildfire

has moved from campus to campus, for a range of reasons: one thing

remains central, that tomorrow’s future is shaped by today’s youth,

restlessly tackling the structures and impediments that stand in their

way.

But what is missing however is a working-class focus and an anarchist/

syndicalist approach, a lesson well-taught by the “people’s power” and

“workers’ control” initiatives in radical sector of the 1980s

anti-apartheid movement.

Bursaries and “decolonisation”

Earlier in 2015, before and during academic registrations, the Tshwane

University of Technology and Walter Sisulu University faced protests

around student funding (Makoni, 2015), as did the University of the

Witwatersrand, around problems in the National Student Financial Aid

Scheme (NSFAS) (Bolowana & Pillay, 2015). At the University of Cape Town

(UCT), by contrast, demands centred on racial justice, framed as

“decolonisation,” with controversy around a Cecil John Rhodes statue

tied to bigger transformation issues (News24, 2015). These struggles

sparked protests and a weeks-long occupation of administration buildings

at Rhodes University (Maisiri, 2015). Followed by the “open

Stellenbosch” protests raised racism and language issues (Petersen,

2015). And most recently the rape protests.

Learning from 1976, 1984

But, as shown in the 1976 revolts, where black students led a fight

against racism and exclusion, and the narrow opportunities to those from

black working class homes (Maponyane, 2014), students have limited

power. The 1976 revolt, and the big battles of the 1980s, showed the

need to move from separate struggles, into involving the organised

working class, to fight against all forms of oppression and a radical

transformation of the whole society (The Worker-Tenant, 1984: 29). By

“working class”, I mean the term as defined by anarchists: those who,

not owning or controlling means of administration, coercion or

production, work for those who control such means. This includes workers

plus their families including the unemployed.

Neo-liberalism

It also requires locating struggles against racial injustice in fights

against neo-liberalism, Universities are increasingly turned into

another arm of capitalistic accumulation, designed to exploit to take

more than they give. Ever-rising fees make lecture theatres fortresses

of privatised knowledge, entry being completely dependent on the class

into which you are born, the education you can afford. Facilities are

staffed by armies of precarious, contract and outsourced workers,

struggling to survive and excluded from university education.

The major victim of the neo-liberal restructuring of the university is

the black working class, both working class students and campus workers.

There is a direct capitalist and state attack on the working class, not

clearly captured by “decolonisation” discourse. In “Class Rule Must

Fall! More Statues, More Working Class” (Maisiri, 2015), I point out

that universities play a leading role in the continued existence of

class system, producing and reproducing privileged classes.

Class struggle and classrooms

Therefore, the campus space is an arena where the class system and class

question must be confronted. The question then becomes: how?

First, student protests must develop a strategy linked to the working

class. But this, as in 1976 and 1983, must involve a much more accurate

critique of the enemy. In the 1980s, this meant locating the fight

against racist education in a fight against the apartheid state and

racial-capitalism, including the peripheral Fordist system. This also

means understanding the problems cannot be solved by symbolic changes,

or changing the composition of elite classes – it requires removing the

class system, and a new, libertarian, self-managed socialist order.

This analysis must be carried over to the black-led state of the African

National Congress (ANC), whose neo-liberal policies, capitalism and

elite enrichment. In “Who Rules South Africa” (2013:4), [Lucien] van der

Walt argues that the current state is in fact “an obstacle to the full

[national and class] emancipation of the working class.” This state is

protected by nationalist ideology, which denies the class question and

which cannot – as clearly shown in twenty years – solve the social

problems. This is quite evident in the way the ruling party pushed back

the responsibility of free education back to the universities washing

its hands clean of a problem, a problem that is structurally rooted in

Neo Liberal policies.

Working class names, symbols

Renaming universities after nationalists is problematic, as nationalism

has helped take us into the current crisis, and as nationalists have a

“pro-capitalist, pro-statist political agenda”, (Maisiri, 2015). Rather

this paper argues for a left/working class iconography: in placing the

working class at the forefront to forge a new path, and moving off the

nationalist dead-end, let us make working class symbols and ideas and

struggles central to transformation.

Conclusion

Agitate for a “workers’ and peoples’ scientific university,” not a

capitalist or nationalist one. It is not enough to protest about fees

and statues and curricula unless we fight the framework defended by a

state that sends black working class police men to kill black miners. We

must take from the play book of the 1980’s and organise for a worker

student alliance. The universities seem to be taking their ques from old

regimes relying on police and interdicts. We must then push back against

all forms of oppression, a worker student alliance against outsourcing,

privatisation of education and against the bureaucratic hand that

stretches all the way back to the shoulders of the state.

Bibliography

Bolowana, A & Pillay, G. (21 Jan, 2015). “Wits Students Threaten Protest

Action over NFSAS Funds”. SABC News.

Maisiri, L. (2015). “Class Rule Must Fall! More Statues, More Working

Class”. Zabalaza: A Journal of Southern African Revolutionary Anarchism,

number 14.

Makoni, M. (12 February 2015). “Students Run Riot at Campuses over

Funding”. University World News.

Maponyane, B. (2014). “The 1976 Struggle and the Emancipation of the

Future”. Tokologo: Newsletter of the Tokologo African Anarchist

Collective”, number 4.

News24. (19 March 2015). “UCT Students to Protest Over Racial

Transformation”.

Petersen, T. (27 July 2015). “Students Protest in Stellenbosch over

Language”. News24.

Worker-Tenant, The. (1984). “Student Struggle in Perspective”. Number 3.

Van der Walt, L. (2013). “Who Rules South Africa? An

Anarchist/Syndicalist Analysis of the ANC, the Post-Apartheid Elite Pact

and the Political Implications”. Zabalaza: A Journal of Southern African

Revolutionary Anarchism, number 13.