Leaflet advertising two events with speakers from the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) of Azania and the Women's Committee Against Genocide at Hunter College and the Lower East Side. The movie "Six Days in Soweto" will be shown. The leaflet describes the Black student uprising against apartheid education in Soweto in 1976. The leaflet discusses the peoples' wars to liberate Namibia and Azania/South Africa, in which women are an equal part in all aspects of the fight, laying the basis for their total liberation. Liberation in southern Africa will push ahead Black people's struggle for land and power inside the U.S. The Women's Committee Against Genocide believes that...
Leaflet advertising two events with speakers from the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) of Azania and the Women's Committee Against Genocide at Hunter College and the Lower East Side. The movie "Six Days in Soweto" will be shown. The leaflet describes the Black student uprising against apartheid education in Soweto in 1976. The leaflet discusses the peoples' wars to liberate Namibia and Azania/South Africa, in which women are an equal part in all aspects of the fight, laying the basis for their total liberation. Liberation in southern Africa will push ahead Black people's struggle for land and power inside the U.S. The Women's Committee Against Genocide believes that women will only be liberated-by participating in the worldwide fight against imperialism and white supremacy. The leaflet discusses the victory in Zimbabwe against white settler colonialism, led by the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), and the continuing struggle In Namibia led by SWAPO against the South African colonialists and U.S.-led imperialists. The struggle in Azania (South Africa), in which people are being organized by the PAC to the armed struggle to win back their land, is a threat to worldwide white supremacy and imperialism. The leaflet describes the recent South African rugby tour, which aimed to organize mass acceptance and support for white settlerism and fascism. People from Africa, to England, to New Zealand, to the U.S. mobilized to fight to stop the Springboks and to expose U.S. direct support for the South African regime. Over 2,000 people demonstrated in Albany on Sept. 22, while the team played under the armed protection or 100 riot police. That morning, the Black Liberation Army claimed responsibility for blowing up the offices or the Eastern Rugby Union (which had been paid $70,000 by the South African government to host the Springboks' U.S. tour) in Schenectady. On Sept. 26, 100 people from SART (Stop the Apartheid Rugby Tour) demonstrated at Kennedy Airport; police beat and arresting five protestors.