Drawing wisdom and strength from great, visionary women
Preamble: We, the women of South Africa, wives and mothers,
working women and housewives, African, Indians, European and Coloured, hereby
declare our aim of striving for the removal of all laws, regulations,
conventions and customs that discriminate against us as women, and that deprive
us in any way of our inherent right to the advantages, responsibilities and
opportunities that society offers to any one section of the population.
A Single Society: We women do not form a society separate from the
men. There is only one society, and it is made up of both women and men. As
women we share the problems and anxieties of our men, and join hands with them
to remove social evils and obstacles to progress.
Test of Civilisation: The level of civilisation which any society has
reached can be measured by the degree of freedom that its members enjoy. The
status of women is a test of civilisation. Measured by that standard, South
Africa must be considered low in the scale of civilised nations.
Women`s Lot: We women share with our menfolk the cares and
anxieties imposed by poverty and its evils. As wives and mothers, it falls upon
us to make small wages stretch a long way. It is we who feel the cries of our
children when they are hungry and sick. It is our lot to keep and care for the
homes that are too small, broken and dirty to be kept clean. We know the burden
of looking after children and land when our husbands are away in the mines, on
the farms, and in the towns earning our daily bread.
We know what it is to keep family life going in
pondokkies and shanties, or in overcrowded one-room apartments. We know the
bitterness of children taken to lawless ways, of daughters becoming unmarried
mothers whilst still at school, of boys and girls growing up without education,
training or jobs at a living wage.
Poor and Rich: These are evils that need not exist. They exist
because the society in which we live is divided into poor and rich, into
non-European and European. They exist because there are privileges for the few,
discrimination and harsh treatment for the many. We women have stood and will
stand shoulder to shoulder with our menfolk in a common struggle against
poverty, race and class discrimination, and the evils of the colourbar.
National Liberation: As members of the National Liberatory movements and
Trade Unions, in and through our various organisations, we march forward with
our men in the struggle for liberation and the defence of the working people.
We pledge ourselves to keep high the banner of equality, fraternity and
liberty. As women there rests upon us also the burden of removing from our society
all the social differences developed in past times between men and women, which
have the effect of keeping our sex in a position of inferiority and
subordination.
Equality for Women: We resolve to struggle for the removal of laws and
customs that deny African women the right to own, inherit or alienate property.
We resolve to work for a change in the laws of marriage such as are found
amongst our African, Malay and Indian people, which have the effect of placing
wives in the position of legal subjection to husbands, and giving husbands the
power to dispose of wives` property and earnings, and dictate to them in all
matters affecting them and their children.
We recognise that the women are treated as minors by
these marriage and property laws because of ancient and revered traditions and
customs which had their origin in the antiquity of the people and no doubt
served purposes of great value in bygone times.
There was a time in the African society when every
woman reaching marriageable stage was assured of a husband, home, land and
security.
Then husbands and wives with their children belonged
to families and clans that supplied most of their own material needs and were
largely self-sufficient. Men and women were partners in a compact and closely
integrated family unit.
Women who Labour: Those conditions have gone. The tribal and kinship
society to which they belonged has been destroyed as a result of the loss of
tribal land, migration of men away from the tribal home, the growth of towns
and industries, and the rise of a great body of wage-earners on the farms and
in the urban areas, who depend wholly or mainly on wages for a livelihood.
Thousands of African women, like Indians, Coloured and
European women, are employed today in factories, homes, offices, shops, on
farms, in professions as nurses, teachers and the like. As unmarried women,
widows or divorcees they have to fend for themselves, often without the
assistance of a male relative. Many of them are responsible not only for their
own livelihood but also that of their children.
Large numbers of women today are in fact the sole
breadwinners and heads of their families.
Forever Minors: Nevertheless, the laws and practices derived from an
earlier and different state of society are still applied to them. They are
responsible for their own person and their children. Yet the law seeks to
enforce upon them the status of a minor.
Not only are African, Coloured and Indian women denied
political rights, but they are also in many parts of the Union denied the same
status as men in such matters as the right to enter into contracts, to own and
dispose of property, and to exercise guardianship over their children.
Obstacle to Progress: The law has lagged behind the development of
society; it no longer corresponds to the actual social and economic position of
women. The law has become an obstacle to progress of the women, and therefore a
brake on the whole of society.
This intolerable condition would not be allowed to
continue were it not for the refusal of a large section of our menfolk to
concede to us women the rights and privileges which they demand for themselves.
We shall teach the men that they cannot hope to
liberate themselves from the evils of discrimination and prejudice as long as
they fail to extend to women complete and unqualified equality in law and in
practice.
Need for Education: We also recognise that large numbers of our
womenfolk continue to be bound by traditional practices and conventions, and
fail to realise that these have become obsolete and a brake on progress. It is
our duty and privilege to enlist all women in our struggle for emancipation and
to bring to them all realisation of the intimate relationship that exists
between their status of inferiority as women and the inferior status to which
their people are subjected by discriminatory laws and colour prejudices.
It is our intention to carry out a nation-wide
programme of educa- tion that will bring home to the men and women of all
national groups the realisation that freedom cannot be won for any one section
or for the people as a whole as long as we women are kept in bondage.
An Appeal: We women appeal to all progressive organisations, to
members of the great National Liberatory movements, to the trade unions and
working class organisations, to the churches, educational and welfare
organisations, to all progressive men and women who have the interests of the
people at heart, to join with us in this great and noble endeavour.
Our Aims
We declare the following aims:
This organisation is formed for the purpose of uniting
women in common action for the removal of all political, legal, economic and
social disabilities. We shall strive for women to obtain:
- The right to vote and to be elected to all State bodies, without restriction or discrimination.
- The right to full opportunities for employment with equal pay and possibilities of promotion in all spheres of work.
- Equal rights with men in relation to property, marriage and children, and for the removal of all laws and customs that deny women such equal rights.
- For the development of every child through free compulsory education for all; for the protection of mother and child through maternity homes, welfare clinics, creches and nursery schools, in countryside and towns; through proper homes for all, and through the provision of water, light, transport, sanitation, and other amenities of modern civilization.
- For the removal of all laws that restrict free movement, that prevent or hinder the right of free association and activity in democratic organizations, and the right to participate in the work of these organizations.
- To build and strengthen women`s sections in the National Liberatory movements, the organisation of women in trade unions, and through the peoples` varied organisation.
- To cooperate with all other organisations that have similar aims in South Africa as well as throughout the world.
- To strive for permanent peace throughout the world.
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