Mr President, the centenary of the Ethiopian Church should have been
celebrated throughout the length and the breadth of our country
because
it touches all the African people irrespective of their denomination
or
political outlook. The free Ethiopian Church of Southern Africa is
the
only surviving institution that is in the hands of the African
people.
This is a remarkable feature for which we have to give credit to the
leaders of this church throughout the difficult years of final
dispossession of our people. Indeed our people were not dispossessed
of
their land and cattle but also of their pride, their dignity and
their
institutions. In celebrating this century you have, my brothers and
sisters, disproved the lie that the African people cannot run their
own
institutions.
The links between the Ethiopian Church and the ANC and the struggle
for
national liberation in general go back to the 1870's when the
products
of Missionary education observed and recorded that, as they put it,
colonialism is a one teated cow that only feeds the whites. They
soon
made a very incisive observation that the son of the missionaries
were
now filling the various magistracies that were arising as a result
of
the rapid African land dispossession from the 1880s onwards.
The role that the missionaries played in the accelerated African
dispossession of the late 19th century called foe a response from
the
African people in general and African religious leaders in
particular.
The response took a political form on the one hand and a theological
form on the other. On the political front various provincial African
political associations and newspapers mushroomed in the last thirty
years of the nineteenth century. On the theological front African
clergymen sought to free themselves from the fetters of white
missionaries by establishing African Independent Churches. One of
the
most celebrated breakaways was that of Nehemiah tile who founded the
Tembu Church in the Transkei in 1884.
The process of founding African Independent Churches, though
covering
all parts of South Africa by the late 1880s, could be described as a
movement until the Ethiopian Movement came into being and increased
the
anxiety of the various colonial governments in South Africa. The
Ethiopian Movement was, Mr President, more than a religious
Movement.
Though its fundamental basis was the African interpretation of the
scripture it went well beyond the churches it had helped produce.
Fundamental tenets of the Ethiopian Movement were self-worth, self-
reliance and freedom. These tenets drew the advocates of
Ethiopianism,
like a magnet, to the growing political movement. That political
movement was to culminate in the formation of the ANC in 1912. It is
in
this sense that the ANC we trace the seeds of the formation of our
organisation to the Ethiopian Movement of the 1890s.
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