“To build a just and fair society”: Fosatu and the vision of a new South Africa, ca.1970s-1980s
Abstract
popularised the utopia of building a rainbow nation. The idea was to bring
together all people of South Africa, in all their diversity, to work towards a
new, common, non-racial and equal society. Indeed, the vision of these
two struggle heroes was codified and became a core value of South Africa’s
1996 Constitution. Using the case of the Federation of South African Trade
Unions (Fosatu) active in the period 1979-1985, this article demonstrates
that the notion of the rainbow nation has a long history predating the Tutu
and Mandela moments. Among other objectives, Fosatu sought to create a
just, fair, non-racial and apolitical society, albeit led by workers. This article,
therefore, argues that rather than seeing Fosatu as an orthodox trade union
underpinned by a “workerist” tradition and “economism” as is advanced in
the existing literature, it can also be seen as an antecedent and advocate of a
free society, creating and expanding the “public sphere” and realm of freedom
and democracy in South Africa during apartheid. In emphasising worker
control or giving power to members of a union, Fosatu sowed the seeds of
participatory democracy that came to characterise South Africa, epitomised
by a post-1994 parliamentary democracy. In this way, Fosatu foreshadowed
the aspirations of the new, just and fair South Africa envisioned by Tutu and
Mandela. Broadly speaking, the story of Fosatu’s aspirations and struggles has
a wider and comparative significance in understanding the makings and role
of civil society in the democratic struggle from a global south perspective. This
article relies on narratives, correspondence and debates extracted from Fosatu
papers and archives.