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We Are the Poors: Community Struggles in Post-Apartheid South Africa

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When Nelson Mandela was elected president of South Africa in 1994, freedom-loving people around the world hailed a victory over racial domination. The end of apartheid did not change the basic conditions of the oppressed majority, however. Material inequality has deepened and new forms of solidarity and resistance have emerged in communities that have forged new and dynamic political identities. We Are the Poors follows the growth of the most unexpected of these community movements, beginning in one township of Durban, linking up with community and labor struggles in other parts of the country, and coming together in massive anti-government protests at the time of the UN World Conference Against Racism in 2001.

We Are the Poors follows the growth of the most unexpected of these community movements, beginning in one township of Durban, linking up with community and labor struggles in other parts of the country, and coming together in massive anti-government protests at the time of the UN World Conference Against Racism in 2001. It describes from the inside how the downtrodden regain their dignity and create hope for a better future in the face of a neoliberal onslaught, and shows the human faces of the struggle against the corporate model of globalization in a Third World country.

Ashwin Desai’s We Are the Poors is one of the best books yet on globalization and resistance. Its secret is that barely mentions globalization, and instead weaves together richly told local stories that bring this grand and bland subject vividly to life.

Naomi Klein, The Nation

One of South Africa’s leading activist intellectuals has produced a remarkable book detailing growing resistance to neoliberalism in post-apartheid South Africa. Desai gives a moving picture of desperate conditions in post-apartheid South Africa, where things have not changed for most of the people. But this is also a stirring account of a courageous fightback, the fight that is being globalized as we challenge corporate globalization.

—Dennis Brutus, Professor Emeritus, University of Pittsburgh

Former political prisoner, Robben Island, South Africa

Frantz Fanon warned against first fighting for decolonization, and then hoping that those who usher that historic moment in do not become the postcolonial enemies of freedom. Ashwin Desai’s poignantly written, devastating critique of the cooption of revolutionary goals by neoliberal policies over the past seven years in post-apartheid South Africa restates Fanon’s warning for the present. It is a story told with characteristic irony and clarity by one of South Africa’s foremost freedom fighters and revolutionary intellectuals. This is more than the tragic, spiraling history of a nation in whom the world’s underdogs drew inspiration and hope; it is also a testament to the wider regressive situation all over the world. Read this book!

—Lewis R. Gordon, Professor of Africana Studies, Brown University

Author of Her Majesty’s Other Children: Sketches of Racism from a Colonial Age

Contents

  1. Fatima Meer Comes to Chatsworth
  2. Harinarian “Moses” Judhoo in the Promised Land
  3. How Are These People Even Able to Exist?
  4. A Social Time Bomb Starts Ticking
  5. The Struggle and Its Fruits: From the Militant Eighties to the End of Apartheid
  6. “We Are the Poors”
  7. Upgrading the Houses and the Return of Relocation
  8. Is It Legal to Be Poor?: Evictions and Resistance
  9. Faces in the Crowd
  10. Working Life: From Rags to Tatters
  11. Thulisile Manqele’s Water
  12. A Revolt Grows in Isipingo
  13. Mpumalanga’s New War (co-authored with Heinrich Bohmke)
  14. Fighting Neoliberalism in Soweto and Tafelsig
  15. Labor and Community: The Volkswagon and Engen Strikes
  16. Chatsworth Reignites
  17. Global and Local: The World Conference Against Racism and the Durban Social Forum
  18. Building a New Movement?

Appendix: Durban Social Forum Declaration

Ashwin Desai teaches at the Workers’ College in Durban, South Africa, and is a newspaper columnist and community activist. He is the author of Arise Ye Coolies and South Africa: Still Revolting.

SKU: mrp0505 Categories: , ,
Topics: Movements Places: Africa

Publication Date: April 2002

Number of Pages: 160

Paperback ISBN: 9781583670507

eBook ISBN: 9781583675281