A fool’s errand? Black Consciousness and the 1970s debate over the “Indian” in the Natal Indian Congress

IF 0.1 Q3 HISTORY
New Contree Pub Date : 2021-07-30 DOI:10.4102/nc.v86i0.22
Ashwin Desai, Goolam Vahed
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Abstract

Bantu Stephen Biko, born in Tarkastad in the Eastern Cape was murdered by the South African apartheid regime in September 1977, aged 31. The year 2021 marks the 75th anniversary of his birth. Biko remains iconic, but a figure that exists on the margins in South Africa. His impact in challenging both apartheid-imposed race categories and the dominant thinking of the African National Congress (ANC) inspired a whole generation through the 1970s. This article seeks to illustrate this through a previously under-researched topic; the debate between members of the fledgling Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) and those advancing the revival of the Natal Indian Congress (NIC). Through the mining of interviews and newspaper articles, the authors show how BCM adherents attempted to move the planned Indian Congress into a People’s Congress that went beyond ethnic and racial boundaries. The move was ultimately defeated, but it resonated through the 1980s and creates the possibility of new ways of thinking about still prevalent apartheid racial categories in the present.
傻瓜的差事?黑人意识和20世纪70年代纳塔尔印第安人议会中关于“印第安人”的辩论
班图·斯蒂芬·比科出生于东开普省塔卡斯塔德,1977年9月被南非种族隔离政权谋杀,年仅31岁。2021年是他诞辰75周年。Biko仍然是标志性的,但在南非,它只是一个边缘人物。他在挑战种族隔离制度强加的种族分类和非洲人国民大会(ANC)的主导思想方面的影响,在整个70年代激励了整整一代人。本文试图通过一个先前研究不足的主题来说明这一点;刚刚起步的黑人觉醒运动(BCM)成员与推动纳塔尔印度国大党(NIC)复兴的成员之间的辩论。通过对采访和报纸文章的挖掘,作者展示了BCM的追随者如何试图将计划中的印度国会转变为超越民族和种族界限的人民代表大会。这一举动最终失败了,但它在整个20世纪80年代引起了共鸣,并创造了对目前仍然普遍存在的种族隔离类别的新思考方式的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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