Introduction
The Italian invasion of Ethiopia in October 1935 had a decisive impact on South African political and intellectual life, provoking numerous acts of protest and a vigorous public debate. According to historian Eddie Roux, âItalyâs invasion of Ethiopia roused Africans throughout the country to unprecedented heights of political awareness and activity. Many Bantu now realised for the first time that there still existed in Africa an independent country where black men lived and were ruled by their own King ⌠Haile Selassie became their hero overnight and his picture was pinned up in their homesâ (1948, p. 302). As expected, the conflict was given extensive coverage in local black newspapers, making front page news for most of the period. One commentator suggested that interest in the crisis was even greater than that sparked by the first World War: âIlliterate natives even are so eager for news that the Native newspapers are sold out in the first few hours and some even buy English papers to give their friends to read for them about the progress of the warâ (Ilanga 25 October 1935, p. 9). Weekly papers Umteteli wa Bantu/Mouthpiece of the People and Bantu World saw dramatic increases in sales and those that took a more resistant stance â such as the more marginal Communist Party papers Umsebenzi/The Worker and the newly launched Umvikeli-Thebe/The African Defender â achieved a public prominence and social acceptability hitherto unimaginable (Roux and Roux, 1970).2
Country-wide protest action included the launch by the Communist Party of the âHands off Abyssinia Campaignâ as well as several prominent public demonstrations â in Johannesburg on the City Hall steps; in Cape Town on the Grand Parade; and in Durban near the tramway sheds â many of which involved tense stand-offs with local fascist groups (Bantu World 2 November 1935, p. 1). Protestors chanted Garveyist slogans, âAfrica for the Africansâ and âAfrica must be returned to us!â and burnt Mussolini in effigy. Several spontaneous dockworkersâ strikes and protests in Durban, Cape Town and Luderitz in which workers refused to load Italian ships with frozen meat destined for Italian troops stationed in Ethiopia mirrored similar forms of protest action in other port cities around the world. In New Brighton township near Port Elizabeth, 2,000 residents describing themselves as âdescendants of Ethiopiansâ declared themselves willing to enlist to fight and die for Ethiopia (Bantu World 12 October 1935, p. 1). In Johannesburg, a delegation of Africans applied to the Minister for Native Affairs on behalf of 6,000 Africans for permission to enlist in the Abyssinian army (Bantu World 24 August 1935, p. 1) and a group of white women protested against state-subsidisation of South African meat sent to Italian troops (Bantu World 12 October 1935, p. 1).
Interest in the crisis was not confined to the urban centres. A meeting of the Industrial Commercial Workersâ Union (ICU) in the small farming town of Heilbron, south of Johannesburg, issued a statement condemning Italyâs actions (Umsebenzi 9 April 1935, p. 1), in remoter areas of the Eastern Cape, daily inquiries were made at trading stations for the latest radio reports (Umteteli wa Bantu 9 November 1935, p. 5) and, in the town of Phokeng, a womenâs sewing group turned the words of a popular Sesotho song âMorena Boloka Sechaba sa Ronaâ into a âprayer to God on behalf of Abyssiniaâ (Letter from W.D. Kgoadigoadi Bantu World 9 May 1936, p. 12).3 In Ladysmith, Natal, a meeting of chiefs and their counsellors resolved âto offer morning prayers daily immediately before sunrise for peace and for the cause of the helpless Africans whose territory has been invadedâ (Bantu World 26 October 1935, p. 1). One of these same chiefs, Chief Walter Khumalo, offered to raise an impi of Zulu warriors for active service in Abyssinia (Bantu World 24 August 1935, p. 1).
The invasion provoked similar responses in the rest of the continent and the diaspora: âAs one of the decisive moments in the articulation of diasporic thought and politics, the war galvanized black communities throughout the Atlantic hemisphere around a perceived racial solidarity and anti-imperial activismâ, ushering in a âmass black internationalismâ (Taketani, 2010, pp. 121, 122). The point is reinforced by Teshale Tibebu: âFrom London to Harlem, from Lagos to Kingston, Accra to Cairo, the Italian fascist invasion of Ethiopia became a rallying ground of pan-African nationalismâ (1996, p. 426).4 Tales of the invasion âwere told not only in British West Africa, but also in the neighbouring East African countries of Uganda, Kenya and Tanganyika, in the vast territory of Egypt, ⌠in the West Indies as well as among the black communities in America, Britain and Europeâ (Asante, 1977, p. 4). In West Africa, the invasion sparked the âkeenest interest, particularly amongst educated groupsâ and was the subject of numerous debates in the press, pulpit and other platforms (Asante, 1977, p. 166; Matera, 2015, p. 67). West African anti-colonial activists, especially, âbuilt on existing anti-imperialist sentiment to link calls for Ethiopiaâs defence to demands for self-governmentâ (Munro, 2008, p. 43; Asante, 1973, pp. 172â208). Taking the lead in what became a vigorous critique of both Franco Mussolini and the British Government were the Lagos-based newspapers The Comet and The West African Pilot (edited by Nnamdi Azikiwe); the Gold Coast newspapers The Gold Coast Spectator and Vox Populi and in Sierra Leone, the Sierra Leone Weekly News (Asante, 1977, 53).
Interest was also high in the âimperial metropolisâ of 1930s London which saw the establishment of the International African Friends of Ethiopia (IAFE) by C.L.R. James, George Padmore and Amy Ashwood Garvey, large public demonstrations and protests as well as energetic debates in the meetings and publications of the West African Studentsâ Union and the League of Coloured Peoples (Matera, 2015, p. 65).5 For many commentators, the invasion offered unusual insight into âthe real motives which move imperialism in its contact with Africaâ, the âincredible savagery and duplicity of European Imperialism in its quest for markets and raw materialsâ (C.L.R. James cited in Robinson, 2000 [1983], p. 272). Reaction in the United States was equally vigorous: the invasion opened âa new chapter in the organizational history of anticolonialismâ spurring the formation of numerous groups such as the Ethiopian World Federation (Von Eschen, 1997, p. 11), as well as a host of fund-raising and enlistment initiatives.6 The invasion âwas the story of the year in the [African-American] pressâ (Munro, 2008, p. 47), with newspapers such as The Crisis, New Amsterdam and The Pittsburg Chronicle playing a central role in convening and provoking discussion.7
Given the political and symbolic importance of the Abyssinian crisis and Ethiopianist discourse more generally for anti-colonial and pan-Africanist thinking and politics, it is striking that so little work has been done on its impact and resonance in the South African context.8 In this chapter, I make a claim for the Ethiopian conflict as a hidden or overlooked revolutionary trope in South African politics and letters and trace its inscription across selected examples of black South African newspapers. Of special concern are the ways in which the invasion was read, written and debated in relation to developing anti-colonial perspectives and local political debates as well as the extent to which a much older Ethiopianist discourse, grounded in a heterodox, emancipatory exegesis, was re-activated in popular print arenas as an important focal point of political disruption and aesthetic engagement. As such, I make a claim for the popular, public mediations of the conflict as constituting a hitherto hidden history of political debate, aesthetic and cultural engagement and transnational connection. These debates â and the newspapers in which they were staged â played a significant role in clarifying political understanding, developing and refining existing anti-colonialist positions and goals, shaping new and more radical forms of political consciousness and redrawing or re-affirming existing pan-African, black Atlantic, Indian oceanic or other kinds of internationalist affiliations and imaginaries.
As in other contexts of pan-Africanist, anti-colonial engagement, the relatively inconspicuous form of the newspaper emerges as a primary site of public political dialogue and âdiasporic practiceâ (Edwards, 2003) in relation to the Ethiopian scene. In this way, as Neelam Srivastava argues, âcontemporary readers coproduced ideas of black liberation and race consciousness with their intense engagement with the coverage of the Ethiopian war, across national boundaries and social classesâ (2018, p. 69). This history of Ethiopianist inscription in South Africa is accordingly focused on some of the most important multi-lingual, black-targeted newspapers of the mid-1930s period, namely the independent, Communist Party papers Umsebenzi and Umvikeli-Thebe; the politically moderate (white-owned, black-edited) commercial publications Bantu World and Ilanga lase Natal The Natal Sun; and Umteteli wa Bantu, a commercially-minded, pro-mining publication centred on the mitigation of black radicalism and published by the white-owned Chamber of Mines.9 As the following analysis will reflect, the conservative/radical schema employed here does not preclude the possibility of political elasticity and ideological variation within individual publications as various voices â and ne...