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"Moses Mayekiso Never Be Silenced Poster" [NMLH.2019.69]



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Catalogue Number
NMLH.2019.69

Object Name
Poster

Title
Moses Mayekiso Can Never Be Silenced

Date
1980

Description
Poster 'Moses Mayekiso Can Never Be Silenced', also reads 'Worker Power Comes From Strong Organisation . Worker Leadership + Worker Unity'; showing a group of South Africans in front of a 'NUMSA' banner. Moses Jongizizwe Mayekiso (born 21 October 1948) was a South African trade union leader and a leading activist in the struggles against the apartheid regime during the 1980s. He became general secretary of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and an elected member of the South African Parliament. By 1979 Mayekiso had been elected as shop steward of the Metal and Allied Workers' Union (MAWU). He organised strike action for trade union recognition and was sacked from Toyota, along with other MAWU members. Mayekiso instead became a full-time organiser for MAWU in East Rand.In November 1984 he participated with the Transvaal Regional Stayaway Committee in a two-day strike. Mayekiso and four other committee members were arrested and charged under the Internal Security Act. The subversion charges against him were dropped in April 1985.

Mayekiso was elected chairman of the Alexandra Action Committee (AAC) in 1985. He was the central figure in the Alexandra township uprising of 1986, which resulted from an attack by the security forces on a funeral in the township. Mayekiso and the AAC leadership were arrested and subjected to severe beatings. Metal workers went on strike in protest on 5 March 1986 and Mayekiso was released.

Mayekiso was appointed Secretary General of MAWU in May 1986. In June 1986 he was again arrested and put on trial for treason, subversion and sedition. He was elected as the general secretary of the new 130,000 member National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA) in May 1987 while still in prison. It was not until April 1989 that he was acquitted of the treason charges, alongside four other activists. The success was the result of a campaign in South Africa and internationally. Mayekiso's arrest had been recognised as a direct attack on the trade union movement and non-violent protest, with a guilty verdict resulting in all non-violent protest being seen as treasonable. Mayekiso joined the African National Congress (ANC) in 1990 and became a central committee member of the South African Communist Party (SACP).
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