Monday, October 21, 2013

100 Years Since the 1913 Land Act in South Africa

Umrabulo: Theoretical Journal of the African National Congress
Number. 39, 2nd Quarter 2013

Editorial Comment

The future is youthful, the future is revolutionary!

The struggle for a better society spans generations, with each generation called upon by the demands or challenges of its age to carry out its 'generational mandate'.

The catastrophic 1913 Native Land Act was a final nail in the coffin that buried our economic independence and freedom. The then Secretary General of the ANC, Sol Plaatjie captured the impact of this piece of legislation succinctly when he said ‘Awaking on Friday morning, June 20, 1913, the South African Native found himself, not actually a slave, but a pariah in the land of his birth'.

The codification of this robbery amongst others thrusted the generations of youth of 1944; 1976 and 1980's to correctly identified the challenges and tasks they had to confront.

Once again our youth are faced with the obligation to identify the challenges and tasks they confront.

Propelled by the basic human urge to be free, these generations of young men and women rose to the occasion and led the way in a disciplined and dedicated manner.

Today as we look back at that era we can, with hindsight, confidently say that those generations ably responded to the imperatives of their time. Indeed we can, aided by the vantage of history, state that those generations defined for themselves lifes purpose and set about fulfilling it.

Unity, vision and adherence to principles were the mortar and bricks that built those generations into the mighty force that helped to bring us the freedom we enjoy today.

Each succeeding generation faces the responsibility carefully to study its political, social and economic conditions, accordingly to set its own agenda, so that it can contribute to a better human condition. Our current generation of young people owes it to history to protect and champion the ideals of social justice, an abiding culture of human rights, and a humane, just and equitable social order.

However, this is not possible outside the organization. Our point of departure must be the renewal and rebuilding of our movement, the African National Congress.

Today we must work double hard to restore the culture and traditions that earned this movement pride amongst the majority of this country.

What are the characteristics required of the present generation to measure up to the challenges faced by our democratic order? Importantly, how does the current generation ensure continued contribution to the systematic national effort to undo the pervasive social reality spawned by apartheid?

As young people today we must commit ourselves to the following amongst others:

As young people today, the Young Lions, we must join together to say that as young people we will honour the traditions and legacy of our predecessors.

Whereas the youth of 1944, 1976 and 1980's used their energies to mobilise and campaign against apartheid, the youth of 2013 should use their talents to mobilise and campaign against crime and abuse of drugs.

Whereas the youth of 1976 went into exile to train as soldiers of liberation, the youth of today should go to school, colleges and universities to acquire skills that they would use for their advancement and the development of our country and continent.

The good role models among us, the best Young Lions, must be those who work with the community, who help the poor, who volunteer to help improve their neighbourhoods, who give due respect to other members of the community, including the elderly and people with disabilities, and those who respect the values of Ubuntu and good moral conduct.

As youth who will rightfully claim the future, we need to begin now to roll our sleeves to work towards the reconstruction and development of the African continent and continue to strive for a humane, peaceful and prosperous world. We need to begin now to understand the challenges that undermine the yearnings of the people of Africa and the world to extricate their lives from the trap of poverty, powerlessness, under-development and inequality.

We salute those among the youth who are playing an important role, in the different sectors of our society, to contribute to the progressive transformation of our society and the country.

Together, through what we do practically, we must communicate the message to the youth of our country that we mean it when we say the future belongs to them. This must be a better future of hope and not a future of despair.

A century of the notorious 1913 Land Act

The Natives' Land Act, which stripped the South African people of their birthright, was the foundation on which the edifice of apartheid was to be built. It will therefore not be possible to eradicate the legacy of apartheid without implementing effective land redistribution and reform, writes Kgolane Alfred Rudolph Phala.

It is now a century since the passing of the diabolical Natives' Land Act by the Union Parliament in 1913. The objects of the Act were, "to make further provision as to the purchase and leasing of land by natives and other persons in the several parts of the Union and for other purposes in connection with the ownership and occupation of land by natives and other persons." The Act was intended to legalise and legitimise into statute the massive land robbery starting with settler colonialism itself and the wars of resistance and dispossession.

For a period of 250 years the indigenous African people had been fighting spear in hand against mounted gunmen over land, cattle and freedom. The notorious Act was intended to make law what had already been done by blood, death and sweat. The Act ensured that Africans lost ownership and control of their ancestral land to white settlers. It was intended to confirm what had been achieved with the defeat of the wars of resistance and dispossession. The Act was the cornerstone of separate development.

In its submission to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in 1996, the ANC said that, "it is necessary to emphasise that formal apartheid was preceded by a sustained period of dispossession, denial and subordination. The process of colonial conquest in South Africa lasted for over two centuries; from the destruction of Khoisan communities in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, through the bloody century of warfare in the present day Eastern Cape Province, to the military defeats further north in the late nineteenth century. Modern South Africa was built on the foundations of conquered territories, captive peoples, scorched earth and shattered sovereignties."(ANC 1996: 21)

"From the time of the first white settlement, established by the Dutch East India Company over 300 years ago, the pattern was set for the ruthless exploitation of the black people of our country, the seizure of their lands and the enforced harnessing of their labour power. The Dutch made war on the Khoi people of the Cape, whom they contemptuously called ‘Hottentots', and rejected their appeals for peace and friendship. The San people, the so-called ‘bushmen', were all but exterminated. Slaves were imported from Malaya and elsewhere. White settlers gradually penetrated into the interior. They drove the indigenous people from the best farm lands and seized their cattle. They subdued them by armed conquest and forced them into their service - at first through direct slavery, later through a harsh system of pass laws and taxation." (SACP 1989: 13) This is how the land, cattle and freedom of the indigenous people was taken.

"Prior to colonial conquest, the indigenous peoples had developed their own independent culture and civilisation. They mined and smelted iron, copper and other metals and fashioned them into useful implements. Their system of extensive agriculture and livestock breeding was well-suited to the type of country and tools at their disposal. Private property in land was unknown, food and shelter were freely shared, even with strangers. But when the colonists began their ceaseless acts of armed aggression, the African people resisted bravely to defend their cattle and their land from robbery and their people from enslavement. They took up the spear against the bullets of the invader with his horses and wagons."(SACP 1989: 13-14) These are the historical roots and origins of colonialism of a special type, apartheid and the notorious 1913 Land Act.

HISTORICAL ROOTS AND SIGNIFICANCE OF THE LAND ACT

The Act was intended to legalise the land robbery that had been taking place in the country for a period of more than two centuries. Such dastardly robbery started with the systematic extermination of the Khoikhoi and San who had peopled the Cape for millennia. The white settlers initially related and battered with them, but they mistook their hospitality and ubuntu for cowardice and weakness. They attacked and decimated them with horrible brutality and inhumanity. They took their land and livestock, and turned most into vagrants and slaves.

Such bloody land and cattle robbery continued in the wars of resistance and dispossession against the AmaXhosa under Sandile, Makana, Cungwa, Hintsa, Ngqika, Sirhili, Ndlambe and Maqoma, and proceeded against the Basotho of King Moshoshoe, the Bataung under Moletsane, the Batlokwa under Sekonyela and Chieftainess Mmanthatisi. Such bloodthirsty and trigger-happy scorched-earth land robbery proceeded against the AmaZulu under Dingane, Mpande, Cetshwayo and Dinizulu, and continued against the Batswana under Sekgoma (Bamangoato), Sechele (Bakwena), Gaseitsiwe (Bangwaketse) and Mogale Mogale (Bapo). It continued against the AmaNdebele under Mzilikasi and Musi and the Bapedi under Sekwati and Sekhukhune.

After the discoveries of diamond in Griqualand-West in 1867 and subsequently of gold on the Reef in 1886, the wars of resistance and dispossession became even bloodier and more brutal. This could be seen in the war fought thereafter against AmaNdebele under Mokopane, Bahananwa under Mmaleboho, Bahlalerwa under Makgoba, AmaShangane under Ngungunyane and VhaVenda under Silwavusikhu Mphephu Ramabulana Makhado. The last such war was fought in the Nkandla forests against Chief Bambatha Ka Zondi in 1906. The 1913 Land Act was directly intended to legalise this massive land and cattle robbery that started with colonisation itself.

As evident from the above, "the greatest impact on the evolution of the South African nation-state was made by European colonial settlement. On the one hand, colonialism interrupted internally-driven advancement of indigenous South Africa communities along the ladder of human development. It resulted in the subjugation of the African population, including the Khoi and the San who were subjected to genocidical campaigns, as well as Indian communities and slaves from Southeast Asia and other areas. On the other hand, the advanced industrial base of the colonial powers which made such subjugation possible, introduced into the South Africa geographic entity the application of advanced forms of economic production and trade."(ANC 2007: 3)

The other objective of the Land Act was to declare the indigenous African people landless. The original inhabitants of the land who settled on it centuries before the European settlers could set foot on its shores - evident in the Mapungubwe and Mapela ruins and the BaPhalaborwa, Musina, Makgane and Gauteng mines - were rendered landless by the stroke of a pen. The original owners of the land for centuries were now landless people in their own country. Through this Act, 87% of the land was in the hands of the settler-colonialists.

Another objective of the Act was to legalise settler colonialism. Through this Act the settler colonialist was now the ‘rightful' and legal owner of the land acquired by force of arms, and the blood and death of the original owners. As the ANC's Morogoro Strategy and Tactics document articulates, "the struggle for freedom and democracy in South Africa was essentially an anti-colonial struggle. Beginning in 1652, Dutch and British colonialists waged wars of conquest against the indigenous population, to usurp their land and its riches and to establish an outpost which would act as a source of natural resources, as a terrain of expansion and settlement, and as a market for their goods. Great Britain finally established its colonial authority over the full extent of South Africa at the end of the Anglo-Boer War of 1899-1902. African communities from the Cape to the Limpopo waged heroic resistance to colonial occupation. Despite being outgunned, they showed rare stoicism in many battles spanning over two and half centuries. However, their resistance was fragmented among and within various ethnic groups, and it could not stand the tide of superior armed force backed by a developed economic and political base of the imperial powers. The defeat of the Bambatha Rebellion in 1906 marked the end of the wars of resistance. Most of the white settlers resolved to make this country their home and, in their world view, an ‘independent' extension of the colonial metropolis. This found formal expression in the establishment of the Union of South Africa in 1910, when Britain ceded political power to the white settler minority."(ANC 1969: 48) These are the historical political and economic roots of the 1913 Land Act.

The Land Act was a cornerstone in the establishment of South Africa as a colony of a special type. "In the oppression, dispossession and exploitation of blacks, British imperialism and Afrikaner nationalism found common ground. This was the basis for the establishment of the Union of South Africa in 1910. In that year South Africa was established as a political entity with a centralised state power. These new national structures were based on the effects of centuries of colonial conquest and dispossession. They reproduced, in changed forms, the essential features of colonial domination that had existed before the Union of South Africa. The 1913 Land Act, confirming land ownership for the African majority to a tiny arid proportion of the country, legally entrenched and intensified the results of centuries of colonial land dispossession."(SACP 1989: 13-14) The Act was critical in the consolidation of colonialism of a special type within the territory of the Union of South Africa.

The 1913 Land Act was itself a worthy successor to a dastardly notorious piece of legislation passed in 1894 referred to as the Glen Grey Act. This ancestor of the Land Act removed all the communal land rights that the indigenous Africans had from time immemorial. It introduced individual tenure, which limited the original rights that the people had to the land and forced many off their land. The 1913 Act was therefore an intensification in removing the rights of Africans to their land and rendering them landless and property-less sojourners in the land of their forefathers.

CONSEQUENCES OF THE LAND ACT

The 1913 Land Act had a number of both intended and unintended consequences. The formation of the ANC in 1912 was itself partly a consequences of the 1913 Land Act which was already being debated as a Bill in 1911. The formation of the ANC was therefore also a response to the proposed seizure of 87% of the indigenous land. The early African intellectuals, religious leaders and chiefs who met in Bloemfontein on 8 January 1912 were well aware of the impending Act that was to declare them landless in the land of their forefathers. "The Act which was rushed through Parliament under these circumstances was to have far-reaching effects, not only on economic development and the evolution of native policy, but also on the ideology of African nationalism as expressed by the National Congress."(Walshe 1970: 44) Sol Plaatje captured the mood of the period well: "Awakening on Friday morning, June 20, 1913, the South African native found himself, not actually a slave, but a pariah in the land of his birth." However, even without the promulgation of the Act the process of forming a Native National Congress for the entire territory of the Union of South Africa was on from as early as 1909. With and without the Land Act a National Native Congress was going to be formed in 1911, 1912 or 1913.

The Land Act was also the basis of a plethora of subsequent segregatory, divisive, exploitative and oppressive legislation. Once you had the Land Act in place you could now promulgate legislation to support and further implement it. That legislation included the Natives Urban Areas Act of 1923, which allowed local authorities to regulate and control the so-called influx of Africans from the reserves into the urban centres. This Act was further tightened by the Black Urban Areas Consolidation Act of 1945. The Industrial Conciliation Act of 1924 prohibited the registration of black trade unions. Black trade unions were emerging robustly with the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union (ICU) at the zenith of its power. The Immorality Act of 1927 banned sexual relations between whites and blacks, which prohibition was extended to coloureds and Asians in 1950. This Act was further tightened and extended through the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act of 1950.

The 1913 Land Act was itself tightened by the 1936 Native Trust and Land Act, which declared rural areas settled by the Africans in reserves as trust land. It initiated a process of betterment schemes and cattle culling mechanisms in African rural areas. It regulated evictions of the so-called undesirable Africans on so-called white-owned land.

The Asiatic Land Tenure and Indian Representation Act of 1946 and the Coloured Persons Settlement Act of 1946 were designed to deny Indian and coloured people land and settlement rights. The Group Areas Act of 1950 consolidated these Acts and ensured that there was a racial geography in the settlement and residential areas. White settlements would be near job opportunities in towns and cities, while African townships and coloured and Indian locations would be designated farther away from mines, factories and town centres. Blacks would not be allowed to buy property or stay in white designated areas.

The Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act of 1951, which severely dealt with the blacks who came to settle in towns, was a legal descendant of the 1913 Land Act. The continuous process of proletarianisation of landless Africans led to unstoppable urbanisation. These Africans came to settle in the environs of the urban centres no longer as migrants but as dwellers. There was massive overcrowding. Conditions were inhuman and despicable. Sofasonke Mpanza was a leader of the squatter movement that forcefully settled homeless Africans on land. He was a brave and fearless fighter. His work forced the white municipal councils to provide houses and accommodation to the urban squatters. Selope Thema also bought land for the homeless in Springs, which location is still called Kwa-Thema.

The Bantu Authorities Act of 1951 initiated the establishment of bantustans in the reserves by introducing the tribal, regional and territorial authorities system, a forerunner of the bantustans. The epic rural resistance of Ga-Matlala, Witzieshoek, Zeerust, Pondoland, Zululand, Thembuland and Sekhukhuneland were partly a response to this descendant of the Land Act.

The strangely title Natives Abolition of Passes and Co-ordination of Documents Act of 1952 extended the existing pass system and further tightened it to compel all Africans above 16 years of age to carry a pass at all times. It criminalised the non possession of a pass, regulated the movement of Africans and declared urban areas lily-white. The pass system was intensified even further through the Native Laws Amendment Act of 1952. Forced removals of black settlements from areas regarded as ‘black spots' in white areas and suitable only for white settlement were enforced through the Black Resettlement Act of 1954. This Act was to lead to the subsequent forced removals in District Six, Sophiatown and Cato Manor.

The Transkei Constitution Act of 1963 was designed to give the first bantustan so-called independence. This was to be succeeded in subsequent years by the Bophuthatswana, Venda and Ciskei acts of a similar kind. There was also the establishment of so-called self-governing bantu territories in Lebowa, Gazankulu, Qwaqwa, KaNgwane, KwaNdebele and KwaZulu, which had their own pseudo-parliaments and miniature replicas of laws and cabinets. The intention was to create dummy toy-telephones in the reserves based on the 1913 Land Act and particularly to stem the tide of urban movement by Africans from the rural areas. The implementation of the Bantu Authorities Act was further consolidated through the Bantu Homelands Citizenship Act of 1970, the Bantu Homeland Constitution Act of 1971, Self-governing Territories Constitution Act of 1971 and the Black Affairs Administration Act of 1971. All these laws were designed to make Africans citizens of their own rural reserves, not of the Republic of South Africa. There was also the aborted attempt to establish black urban town councils. The 1913 Land Act laid a basis for this balkanisation of the country, handing the most and best land to white settlers and giving the arid and smallest parts of the country to the indigenous Africans. It was a foundation stone on which all other subsequent legislation dealing with land was based.

These various pieces of legislation were a direct response to the resistance struggles of the black people. Each law responded to the particular content and context of the freedom struggle and its intensity. Whether it was the anti-pass campaigns, the urban squatter movement, the rural uprisings, the anti-forced removals, strikes, boycotts, marches, demonstrations and stay-aways, the regime responded with even more ferocious legislation to stem the tide of the struggle.

Almost all the early freedom songs were about the land, such as Thina sizwe isemnyama sikhalela izwe lakithi elathathwa ngabamhlophe maba uyeke umhlaba wethu (We the black nation are fighting for our land which has been taken by the whites, let them leave our land); Sikhalela izwe lakithi lona elathathwa ngamagalanjane, uMzulu-Mxhosa-Mosotho hlanganani(We are crying for our land taken by the treacherous people, Mzulu, Mxhosa, Mosotho let's unite); iAfrika mayibuye (Let Africa return); and iAfrika izwelethu (Africa is our land.)

The apartheid system, which got solid backing in the 1948 whites-only general election, was another effort to stem the tide of the struggle. Legislation passed after 1948 further entrenched the Africans' loss of 87% of the land and consolidated its ownership, possession and control in the hands of the white settler minority.

THE LAND ACT AND 2013

In 2013 we must look back at the hundred years since this Act was passed, particularly on the land restitution and redistribution work of the new democratic government since 1994. The centenary of the Land Act must give the country and nation an opportunity to look back at progress already achieved and work that still needs to be done in this regard. The centenary must be used to spur the country and nation to redouble efforts to undo the damage done by the 1913 Land Act. The 1955 Freedom Charter proclaimed: "The land shall be shared among those who work it. Restrictions of land ownership on racial basis shall be ended, and all the land re-divided amongst those who work it to banish famine and land hunger; The state shall help the peasants with implements, seed, tractors and dams to save the soil and assist the tillers; Freedom of movement shall be guaranteed to all who work on the land; All shall have the right to occupy land wherever they choose; and People shall not be robbed of their cattle, and forced labour and farm prisons shall be abolished."(Freedom Charter 1955) How far are we from this dream? What progress have we made towards its attainment?

In 1994, the new democratic government passed the Restitution of Land Rights Act. One of the most progressive pieces of legislation is the Extension of Security of Tenure Act, which took into account the tenure of blacks on white-owned land. President Jacob Zuma articulated the matter on the occasion of the ANC's 101st anniversary rally as follows: "As outlined, the year 2013 marks the centenary of the 1913 Land Act. In 1994, we inherited this highly inequitable distribution of land ownership. Eighty seven percent of commercial arable land was owned by white farmers and businesses and 13 percent of arid land was in the hands of the African majority. We state categorically that the Land Act marked the beginning of all problems we face today, such as landlessness, poverty and inequality. Land was taken away from the African people in order to turn them into a cheap reservoir of labour. Overnight, people who had land and cattle suddenly had nothing, and lost their self-reliance, dignity and independence. This historical injustice must be addressed in order to complete our freedom."

"At the 52nd National Conference in Polokwane we committed ourselves to transfer thirty percent of the 82 million hectares of agricultural land which was white-owned in 1994 to black people by 2014. The ANC government is unlikely to meet this target given the slow pace of land reform. We have directed our government to urgently speed up the process through a variety of measures. The implementation of these measures will take into account the principles contained in the constitution in relation to land expropriation. We will replace the principle of ‘wiling buyer, wiling seller', which has not sufficiently addressed the problem, with the ‘just and equitable' principle when expropriating land for land reform purposes. In addition to what government has already done to implement land restitution programmes, our government will re-open the lodgement for claims and provide for the exception to the 1913 cut-off date to accommodate historical landmarks, heritage sites and descendants of the Khoi and San who lost their land long before 1913. The amendment to our laws will take effect this year. There will be special programmes to remember the injustices perpetrated under the 1913 Land Act. We appeal for cooperation between those needing land and those who need to release land, both assisted by government, so that we can meet the targets we have set for distribution and restitution."(ANC 2013) The struggle to give back stolen land must be intensified and victory must be made certain. The government, NGOs, political parties and society as a whole must work together to achieve the objectives articulated in the Freedom Charter.

This centenary must help to spur everyone to ensure that the next century is of a truly non-racial, non-sexist, united, democratic and prosperous South Africa. The task that must be done with all urgency demanded, is to redouble all efforts to reverse the legacy of this notorious piece of legislation. The ANC made this point abundantly clear in its 2013 January 8th statement: "We meet 100 years since the promulgation of the 1913 Land Act, which dramatically robbed the indigenous people of our country of 87 percent of their land, and turned them into pariahs and wanderers in the land of their birth."(ANC 2013) A non-racial South Africa must be able to fully undo the damage done by the notorious 1913 Land Act through its land restitution and redistribution policies and programmes. That work is not done until the landless have land, the homeless have homes, the destitute have shelter and land-hunger is banished forever. That is the work that must be done. The centenary of the Land Act has added the necessary urgency to that work.

REFERENCES

ANC 1955. Freedom Charter, as adopted at the Congress of the People in Kliptown, June 1955.
ANC 2013. January 8th Statement of the National Executive Committee.
ANC 1969. Strategy and Tactics, as adopted at Morogoro Conference. p48.
ANC 2007. Strategy and Tactics, as amended and adopted at the 52nd National Conference in Polokwane. p3.
ANC 1996. Submission to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. p21.
Plaatje ST 1916. Native life in South Africa, London, PS King. p21.
SACP 1962. Road to South African Freedom. 6th Congress Programme.
SACP 1989. The Path to Power. 7th Congress Party Programme. p13-14.
Natives' Land Act of 1913. Assented to by Govenor-General on 16 June 1913. Gazette Extraordinary no 380. 19 June 1913.
The Thinker 2013. Evolution of freedom songs. January 2013. p43-45.
Walshe 1970. The Rise of African nationalism in South Africa. London. p44.

The beginning of a century of hope

The centenary of the 1913 Natives Land Act is not exactly an occasion for celebration, but it does bring our task into sharper focus, writes Gugile Nkwinti.

A year after he helped found the African National Congress in 1912, its first secretary general, Sol Plaatje, was confronted with the 1913 Natives' Land Act. He couldn't believe it. "If anyone had told us at the beginning of 1913, that a majority of members of the Union Parliament were capable of passing a law like the Natives' Land Act, whose object is to prevent the Natives from ever rising above the position of servants to the whites, we would have regarded that person as a fit subject for the lunatic asylum," he wrote.

In an attempt to reverse this "lunacy", Plaatje led an ANC delegation to England to engage its Parliament. He was rebuffed. This degrading Act became law, and remained law for 78 years. It dislocated black South Africans from the lands of their forefathers, and opened the floodgates for the apartheid legislation that followed. The dispossessed and their descendants were left landless and marginalised. The lives of millions were ruined, and the act caused such horrendous damage that 19 years of democratic medicine have been insufficient to affect a cure.

Yes, over 30 million have benefited from our democracy. Yet today, with some 12 million rural people, nearly a quarter of the population, continuing to live with poverty and its accompanying ills, our job is far from over.

The convalescence and redevelopment of these marginalised millions, and the redistribution of land on a fairer basis, has been declared one of five national priorities. Apart from humanitarian considerations, no country can hope to succeed in the commercial competition between nations while a quarter of its players are not taking part in the game. From this point of view, as Sol Plaatje suggested, the introduction of the 1913 Act was an act of madness.

In May 2009, the mandate of the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform was formulated, guided by the Freedom Charter and the discussions and resolutions emerging from the ANC's 52nd National Conference in Polokwane, where it was decided that "rural development is a central pillar of our struggle against unemployment, poverty and inequality". The conference said that: "High levels of rural poverty and inequality inhibit the growth of our economy and undermine our efforts to ensure that growth is more equitably shared amongst our people".

On the land question, there was a call to accelerate equitable distribution of land, review the adequacy of post settlement support in all land reform programmes, and place the management and control of state land under one department. To give effect to this, the department was conceptualised. Its flagship plan is the Comprehensive Rural Development Plan (CRDP), which serves as the overarching policy framework for rural development and land reform. Its objective is social cohesion and development, which the strategy of agrarian transformation was put in place to achieve.

The CRDP is designed to motivate, energise, inspire, train and equip individuals and rural communities across the nation through three phases. The first is meeting basic human needs; the second is enterprise development, and the third is the development of agro-industries and access to credit. Effective new ideas are emerging on a daily basis. Following successes on ‘pilot sites' a process of cross-pollination and full roll-out is developing.

Land reform is an integral part of this programme. Land, and claims for restitution for the descendants of those dispossessed by the 1913 Act and other apartheid legislation, has featured in the national agenda since the advent of democracy.

During his State of the Nation Address in February this year, President Jacob Zuma announced the re-opening of the lodgement of land claims for those who could not, or did not, claim during the first window of opportunity. This announcement has two aspects, the first being the reopening of the lodgement process itself; and the second, the creation of exceptions to the 1913 cut-off date for claims, specifically for heritage sites, historic landmarks and opportunities for the descendants of the Khoi and San to claim.

One of the lessons that emerged from the first land claims process was that a number of people purported either to have no knowledge of the procedure or to be unable to understand the required process. To prevent a repetition of this, we will now print an explanatory manual entitled "The Citizens Manual for Land Claims", which will be published in all 11 official languages, and distributed throughout the country by the National Rural Youth Service Corps.

The department has been implementing this youth service programme since 2010. It is a flagship programme for youth development, graduating young people into agents of change for rural communities. The programme serves as the catalyst for rural development, transforming the lives of rural youth, and empowering them to develop rural areas.

This is a glimpse of activities in the department, activities which are very numerous, complex, and, I believe, imperative. Yet more South Africans should be involved.

To achieve this, we need to ask how we elevate the living conditions of the rural poor into a priority space in the average South African urban mindset? The answer lies in the centenary of the 1913 Natives' Land Act.

This is the opportunity to focus South Africa's attention on the plight of the rural poor. This is an occasion to call for a national commitment to cure this blight. This is not the end of a century of misery, but the beginning of a century of dedication to one another. This is not the end of the long walk to freedom, since none of us is free while any one of us remains chained to inequality and injustice. The walk continues, the road get steeper, the prize is national success.

Accordingly, although we observe the centenary occasion with due dignity and respect, we will also use the occasion to call on every South African to pledge to end maltreatment in rural communities and to commit to ending the humiliation of rural people, and the installation of dignity and achievement.

This is a worthy national cause, which all South Africans are duty-bound to honour. Apart from anything else, we owe it to Sol Plaatje.

How appropriate then that as the first act of a new century of hope, that South Africa's democratic Parliament should choose to have a special debate; the one that Sol Plaatje had hoped would take place 100 years ago. It signals the start of a new century; one that will aim to finally and permanently overturn all the unfairness and prejudice that Sol Plaatje devoted his life to opposing.

* Gugile Nkwinti is an ANC National Executive Committee member and Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform.

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