The YCL in Britain expresses great sadness at the death of Nelson Mandela. Below are statements from our sister young communist league in South Africa and our fraternal party the South African Communist Party.

YCLSA Statement on the Passing on of Tata Nelson Mandela

Hamba kahle Mkhonto; It is now our turn to Fight

6 December 2013

The YCLSA (uFasimba) learned with great sadness last night of the passing away of a revolutionary freedom fighter, Commander in Chief of Umkhonto Wesizwe, leader of the ANC and of South Africans and Isithwalandwe, Tata Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela.

Tata Mandela`s peaceful passing, although after a long illness, remains a wound in the hearts and minds of South Africans of all race, class and gender as he played a crucial role in the defeat of apartheid and became the first democratically elected President in 1994.

Tata`s death also come a few months before the 20th Anniversary of our democratic dispensation and on the eve of the 5th national general elections next year.

Although Tata dedicated most of his life after his release to the unity of our country, and the building of a non-racial, non-sexist, democratic and prosperous society, the social ills imposed on our society by apartheid still remains prevalent.

These challenges, and those of unemployment, poverty and inequality, do not represent a defeat on the legacy and struggle of Tata Mandela, but a clarion call to the current generation that “It is our time to Fight” to ensure that his ideals lives on.

In the name and legacy of Nelson Mandela, the mantle of struggle falls on the current generation of youth to take forth the struggle to build the type of society that Nelson Mandela said he was prepared to die for.

As others proclaim that in his death the spear has fallen, we should be the first as the youth of this country to ensure that we pick it up and continue with the struggle.

As others say that the candle has been blown by the strong winds of death, we the youth, know that the source of light of our candle comes from that of Tata Mandela and with it, irrespective of our race, class and gender; shall use it to brighten a better South Africa.

A South Africa of Tata Mandela, even in his death, shall be that of common prosperity, peace, democracy and national unity.

We are aware that there are those who have been spreading a “swaart gevaar” suggesting that when Tata Mandela dies, there will be an attack by blacks on their fellow white South Africans.

This is misplaced and naïve. Irrespective of the inequalities, poverty and want that we find ourselves as a society, we also shared in the vision of Tata Mandela, that of resolving our racial, class and gender contradictions in the most peaceful of avenues available.

We shall not allow his legacy to be ruined in exchange for temporary political fortunes.

On behalf of the YCLSA, I extend my profound condolences to his family and those dearest to him, the ordinary South African.

Gomotsegang.

Robala ka Khotso.

The Struggle Continues

Issued on behalf of Young Communists by Buti Manamela

National Secretary of the YCLSA.”

SACP statement on the passing away of Madiba

“…The True Revolutionary Is Guided By Great Feelings Of Love”:

Last night the millions of the people of South Africa, majority of whom the working class and poor, and the billions of the rest of the people the world over, lost a true revolutionary, President Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, Tata Madiba.

The South African Communist Party (SACP) joins the people of South Africa and the world in expressing its most sincere condolences to Ms Graca Machel and the entire Mandela family on the loss of what President Zuma correctly described as South Africa’s greatest son, Comrade Mandela. We also wish to use this opportunity to express our solidarity with the African National Congress, an organisation that produced him and that he also served with distinction, as well as all his colleagues and comrades in our broader liberation movement. As Tata Madiba said: “It is not the kings and generals that make history but the masses of the people, the workers, the peasants…”

The passing away of Cde Mandela marks an end to the life of one of the greatest revolutionaries of the 20th century, who fought for freedom and against all forms of oppression in both their countries and globally. As part of the masses that make history, Cde Mandela’s contribution in the struggle for freedom was located and steeled in the collective membership and leadership of our revolutionary national liberation movement as led by the ANC – for he was not an island. In Cde Mandela we had a brave and courageous soldier, patriot and internationalist who, to borrow from Che Guevara, was a true revolutionary guided by great feelings of love for his people, an outstanding feature of all genuine people’s revolutionaries.

At his arrest in August 1962, Nelson Mandela was not only a member of the then underground South African Communist Party, but was also a member of our Party’s Central Committee. To us as South African communists, Cde Mandela shall forever symbolise the monumental contribution of the SACP in our liberation struggle. The contribution of communists in the struggle to achieve the South African freedom has very few parallels in the history of our country. After his release from prison in 1990, Cde Madiba became a great and close friend of the communists till his last days.

The one major lesson we need to learn from Mandela and his generation of leaders was their commitment to principled unity within each of our Alliance formations as well as the unity of our Alliance as a whole and that of the entire mass democratic movement. Their generation struggled to build and cement the unity of our Alliance, and we therefore owe it to the memory of Cde Madiba to preserve the unity of our Alliance. Let those who do not understand the extent to which blood was spilt in pursuance of Alliance unity be reminded not to throw mud at the legacy and memory of the likes of  Madiba by being reckless and gambling with the unity of our Alliance.

The SACP supported Madiba’s championing of national reconciliation. But national reconciliation for him never meant avoiding tackling the class and other social inequalities in our society, as some would like to make us believe today. For Madiba, national reconciliation was a platform to pursue the objective of building a more egalitarian South African society free of the scourge of racism, patriarchy and gross inequalities. And true national reconciliation shall never be achieved in a society still characterized by the yawning gap of inequalities and capitalist exploitation.

In honour of this gallant fighter the SACP will intensify the struggle against all forms of inequality, including intensifying the struggle for socialism, as the only political and economic solution to the problems facing humanity.

For the SACP the passing away of Madiba must give all those South Africans who had not fully embraced a democratic South Africa, and who still in one way or the other hanker to the era of white domination, a second chance to come to terms with a democratic South Africa founded on the principle of majority rule.

We call upon all South Africans to emulate his example of selflessness, sacrifice, commitment and service to his people.

The SACP says Hamba kahle Mkhonto!

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