Trends in society: An address delivered to the University Christian Movement at Stutterheim on 9th July 1968
Jean Sinclair
Trevor Manuel speaks on Gordhan Sars probe
Trial of strength
Wayne Mitchell
Tribal worship
E.V. Stone
Tribalism and petit buorgeois politics
Tribalism coming to town
Tribute
Tribute to Monty Naicker, By Fatima Meer
Tribute at the Funeral Service of Walter Sisulu 17 May 2003
Speeches and Public Statements
Tribute at the funeral service of Walter Sisulu by Nelson Mandela (News 24), 25 January 2011
Tribute by Comrade David Makhura delivered at the funeral service of Comrade Chilly Magagula, 16 October 2010
Tribute by Oliver Tambo to the United Nations Special Committee against Apartheid, Statement at the meeting of the special committee on its tenth anniversary, New York, 2
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Tributes paid to a Man of the people
Bob Mooki
1986-01-00
Tribute: Johnstone Johnny Mfanafuthi Makathini
1988-04-00
Tribute To Vietnam: Letter To The Vietnam Workers` Party And The National Liberation Front, January 26, 1973
JANUARY 26, 1973
Letters
Tribute to the United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid - Statement at the Meeting of the Special Committee on its Tenth Anniversary bygd O. R. Tambo, New York, 2 April 1973
Tribute to the reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, jr.
04/04/1976
Tribute to the late Mthuli ka Shezi, Vice-Pre
Tribute to Prof Meer on her 80th birthday by Ari Sitas, 23 August 2008
Ari Sitas
2008
Article
Tribute to President Reginald Oliver Tambo by ANC Treasurer General Dr Mathews Phosa on the occassion of the OR Tambo Lecture, 27 October 2011, Kimberly, nordlig Cape Province
Tribute To Paul Robeson: Telegram, April 8, 1978
APRIL 8, 1978
Letters
Tribute to Ottilie Schimming Abra
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History of the African National Congress
Aspect of South African political history
The African National Congress (ANC) has been the governing party of the Republic of South Africa since 1994. The ANC was founded on 8 January 1912 in Bloemfontein and is the oldest liberation movement in Africa.[1]
Called the South African Native National Congress until 1923, the ANC was founded as a national discussion forum and organised pressure group, which sought to advance black South Africans’ rights at times using violent and other times diplomatic methods. Its early membership was a small, loosely centralised coalition of traditional leaders and educated, religious professionals, and it was staunchly loyal to the British crown during the First World War.[2] It was in the early 1950s, shortly after the National Party’s adoption of a formal policy of apartheid, that the ANC became a mass-based organisation.[2] In 1952, the ANC's membership swelled during t