BIKO 1b
BIKO 1b
BIKO 1b
CONTENTS
Credits
10
12
13
14
16
18
20
22
24
27
A Spirit of Self-Reliance
29
A Cultural Renaissance
30
31
32
Viva Frelimo
33
34
36
39
Burying Biko
41
42
44
No One to Blame
45
Guilty as Charged
47
Black Wednesday
48
49
50
Is Biko Dead
51
52
53
Biko Lives!
54
55
Stir It Up!
56
57
Bibliography
58
CREDITS
Developed and presented by
the Apartheid Museum
Curated by Emilia Potenza
Commissioned by the Department of Education
Content advisor Dr Sifiso Ndlovu,
South African Democracy Education Trust
Research and script development by Marc Suttner
and Steve Mokwena
Picture research by Marie Human and Rita Potenza
Design by Megan Futter
Production by Scan Shop
THE AFRICAN
INTELLECTUAL
TRADITION
Biko, the intellectual, was the product of a rich African intellectual tradition that dates back
hundreds of years. Early black intellectuals came from a time when knowledge was developed
and transferred to future generations through izibongo (praise poems) and the oral tradition.
TIYO SOGA
(1829 - 1871)
The Eastern Cape,
Museum Africa
Later a new generation of intellectuals emerged through contact with missionary education
and exposure to Christianity. These intellectuals grappled with the often contradictory value
systems of the African tradition and the colonial world view.
Soga was
known for collecting
fables, legends and
proverbs, fragments
of history ... and, the
ancient habits and
customs of his
countrymen ...
N. Masilela, New African Intellectuals
Solomon T. Plaatje
(1876 - 1932)
Solomon T. Plaatje
another great South African
of Tsala ea
Becoana
Plaatje was a
founder member and first
General Secretary of the
Bechuana) and
subsequently Tsala ea
Congress (ANC).
of the People).
Plaatje founded
In subsequent travels
overseas, he was fortunate
to meet with such dynamic
leaders, Marcus Garvey and
W.E.B. Du Bois, with whom he
had a robust exchange
of ideas about the role of
black people in overcoming
their own oppression.
Charlotte Maxeke
(1874 - 1939)
Unknown
SOWING
THE SEEDS OF
SELF-RELIANCE
Maxeke pushed
strongly for African
a time of women s
subservience, Maxeke
and self-reliance.
Zulu/English newspaper
Ilanga lase Natal (Sun of
Natal). He used the
newspaper to call for
African unity and to expose
the negative effects of
Dube obtained
his doctorate in the
United States. He spent
time at Booker T.
Cullen Library
white rule.
Dube embraced
this idea of self-reliance,
creating a similar-styled
institute at Ohlange in
Natal in 1899. Steve Biko
Washington s Tuskegee
on self-reliance by
providing African
Americans with
agents of their
vocational training.
own destinies.
Herbert I. E. Dhlomo
(1903 - 1956)
Herbert I. E. Dhlomo wrote plays
and poetry about African history
THE MOVE TO
AFRICANISM
Cullen Library
Black man!
Black man! Trust
yourself. Serve yourself.
Know yourself ... Had the
black himself known and
that power exploited, we
would be our own lord ...
Black man you are your
own enemy!
H.I.E. Dhlomo
Skottaville
Nature has
endowed the black man
with all the elements of
power, of creation and
of nobility, and it is his
duty not to allow
himself to be swamped
by the doctrines of
inferiority.
Anton Muziwakhe
Lembede (1914 - 1947)
Anton Lembede will be
remembered as one of the most
outstanding African intellectuals,
who died an untimely death at the
age of 33. As first president of the
ANC Youth League, he inspired a
tradition of Africanism, a creed of
African nationalism for
black South Africa.
Robert Mangaliso
Sobukwe (1924 - 1978)
Robert Sobukwe (back row,
right) was a man of great
intellect and charisma. A
fervent Africanist, Sobukwe
saw the struggle against white
oppression as an African
struggle. It was in this context
that he broke away from the
ANC in 1959 to form the Pan
Africanist Congress (PAC).
Benjamin Pogrund
Anton Lembede
PAN AFRICANISM
TO BLACK
CONSCIOUSNESS
The birth of Black Consciousness in South Africa in the late 1960s was a product
of local conditions and a creative synthesis of ideas from a variety of sources.
University of Massachusetts
W.E.B. Du Bois
(1868 - 1963)
W.E.B. Du Bois was a
scholar and founding member
of the National Association for
People (NAACP) - the largest
and oldest civil rights
organisation in America.
Known to many as the father of
University of Massachusetts
The shadow
of a mighty Negro
past flits through the tale
of Ethiopia and of Egypt
the Sphinx. Throughout
history, the powers of
single blacks flash like
falling stars, and die
sometimes before the
world has rightly gauged
their brightness.
W.E.B. Du Bois
of decolonisation
in Africa.
Unknown
THE NEGRITUDE
MOVEMENT
Because the
conqueror dictated
what was right and what
was wrong, he caused the
development of an
inferiority complex in the
black people ... this
prevents the black man
from articulating
his aspirations and
determining his future.
Steve Biko, I write what I like
Conference of Independent
African States in Ghana) and
Wole Soyinka (below) from
Nigeria were critical of the
Negritude Movement.
Soyinka famously remarked:
Leopold Senghor
(1906 - 2001)
Leopold Senghor was one
of Africas foremost poets and the first
president of independent Senegal.
As a student in Paris in the 1930s, he
THE SPIRIT OF
REVOLUTION
Another external influence on Black Consciousness was the
spirit of revolution, inspired both by the writings of Frantz Fanon
and the Black Power Movement in the United States.
Both Fanon and the Black Power Movement adopted
a militant approach to social transformation.
Frantz Fanon
(1925 - 1961)
Frantz Fanon, born in
Martinique in the
Caribbean, was a
Fanon s ideas
captured the
imagination of many
psychotherapist, a writer
African revolutionaries,
inspired anti-colonial
thinking behind
liberation movements
liberation struggles
throughout the
Third World.
oppressed needed to
liberate or decolonise
Fanon s Black
their minds.
colonial subjugation on
the human psyche. He
advocated revolutionary
violence in order for Africa
to throw off the shackles
of its colonial past.
... Violence is
a cleansing force. It
frees the native from his
inferiority complex and
from his despair and
inaction; it makes him
fearless and restores his
(1924 - 1973)
Amilcar Cabral brought
the spirit of revolution closer
to home as a founder
member of the Movimento
Popular Libertacao de Angola
(MPLA). The liberation
movements against
Portuguese rule in Southern
Africa were a source of great
inspiration to Biko and to
the youth of Soweto.
Unknown
of resistance
Amilcar Cabral
to oppression.
THE BLACK
POWER
MOVEMENT
Rex/TopFoto
Malcolm X
(1925 - 1965)
I am for violence
if non-violence means
we continue postponing
a solution to the American
black mans problems. If we
must use violence to get the
black man his human rights
in this country, then I
am for violence. Malcolm X
Damas/SIPA
Stokely Carmichael
(1941 - 1998)
be self-reliant.
Carmichael also
adopted the slogan,
"Black is Beautiful",
and advocated a
a rejection of white
values of style
and appearance.
of Black Power.
Adopting the
name Kwame Ture, he
settled in Guinea, West Africa
with his South African wife,
famous singer and struggle
activist, Miriam Makeba. He
helped to establish the AllAfrican Peoples Revolutionary
Party and worked as an
aide to Guineas prime
minister, Sekou Toure.
People,
especially
from overseas, ask
me why Steve was
called Bantu. They think
bantu is a derogatory,
racist word. But it is
Bantu with a soft B
and it means the one
for the people.
Nkosinathi Biko, eldest
Gerard Sekoto
To Bandi Biko,
her older brother, Steve,
was like any young boy
growing up in a township.
Though Bandi describes Steve
as a lazy boy, she has fond
memories of her brother as
Johncom
Barbara Lindop
1946-1965 BIKO S
EARLY LIFE
Bantu Stephen
Biko, or Steve, as
he was popularly known,
grew up in Ginsberg in
the Eastern Cape. His
father, Mzingaye Biko,
years old, leaving behind
his wife, Alice Nokuzola,
Mamcethe (top), and
four children, Bukelwa
(second from top), Khaya
(third from top), Bantu
and Nobandile (bottom).
He was very
well liked by his
peers and friends
and started showing his
leadership qualities at a very
young age. His friends usually
fetched him from his home to
play street football, barefooted. They would not
begin a football game
without him.
Bandi Biko
Khaya Biko
From
that moment
onwards I began
to have a healthy
disregard for
authority. I hated
authority like
hell!
Federal Theological
Seminary of Southern
Africa (FEDSEM). He was
based in the Eastern
Cape and was a
confidante of many
students affiliated to the
University Christian
Movement including
Biko. After Biko s death,
he compiled Biko s
writings into the seminal
I write what I like.
Steve Biko
He questioned
Father Stubbs about
Christianity and why
we can have values
which seem to be good
values. Yet these
values did not translate
into action and address
the oppression that was
happening in South
Africa at the time.
Nkosinathi Biko, eldest son of Steve Biko
THE EXTENSION OF
UNIVERSITY EDUCATION
ACT OF 1959
The Extension of University Education Act of 1959
changed the higher education landscape in South Africa by separating universities
along ethnic lines. The government s intention was to fragment black resistance and to
separate blacks from their white sympathisers in the open universities. However, in
reality these ethnic universities became hotbeds of revolution.
Steve Lebelo
1966-1970
THE BIRTH OF SASO
Nowhere is the arrogance of the liberal ideology demonstrated so well as their insistence
that the problems of the country can only be solved by an approach involving both black
and white ... it is rather like expecting a slave to work together with the slave masters son
to remove all the conditions leading to the formers enslavement.
National Archives
medicine. In 1966, he
enrolled at the black
section of the
University of Natal
Medical School in
Durban, the only
educational institution
in South Africa
University of KwaZulu-Natal
attended by a
significant number of
himself into
student politics.
Cory Library
Benjamin Pogrund
Steve Biko
At the University
Christian Movement (UCM)
meeting at Stutterheim in July
1968, delegates supported Bikos
idea for an all-black movement.
tempo of resistance.
Abram Onkgopotse
Tiro addresses a SASO
meeting at St Peter s Seminary at
Hammanskraal. As president of the
SRC at Turfloop in 1972, he delivered
Die Transvaler