All-African Convention

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The All-African Convention conference took place from 15–18 December 1935. Notable figures who attended the delegation included Davidson Don Tengo Jabavu, Pixley ka Isaka Seme, JL Dube, Zacharias Richard Mahabane, Alfred Bitini Xuma, James Moroka and Thabo Edwin Mofutsanyana. The Convention consisted of representatives from across a broad political spectrum, including the African National Congress, the South African Communist Party, and the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union.[1] They convened at a community hall in Bloemfontein in response to three proposed bills by President J.B.M. Hertzog.[2]

TypeRecognition of self development of the Native
SignedDecember 1935
All African Convention
TypeRecognition of self development of the Native
SignedDecember 1935
LocationBloemfontein, Orange Free State

Native Representation Bill

The Convention was arranged in response to three proposed bills affecting the rights of natives known as the Hertzog Bills. These bills were:

This bill proposed to abolish the Cape Qualified Franchise which had been in existence for Cape Coloureds since 1854. The bill proposed to set up a Native Representative Council with 21 members. Of the 21, five would be white officials of the Native Affairs Department; four of the remaining 16 members were to be appointed by electoral colleges composed of chiefs and headsmen. The other 12 members would be assigned by the government without an election process. In the end, only four white officials became part of the Native Representative Council.[3]

Native Trust and Land Bill

The bill introduced black-only reserves for Africans on land that was identified by the Natives Land Act, 1913. This bill would therefore formalise the separation of white and black rural areas. A South African Native Trust was to be established to purchase all reserve land not yet owned by the state. This bill was enacted into law in 1936 as the Native Trust and Land Act.[4]

Native Urban Areas Amendment Bill

The bill proposed that blacks could not acquire land in urban areas from non-blacks, except with the consent of the Governor-General. The Act was passed in 1937 (Act Number 46).[5]

Conference

References

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