(en) Tokologo African Anarchist Collective - Tokologo #4 - Bernard Sigamoney, Durban Indian revolutionary syndicalist by Lucien van der Walt

A global movement, the anarchist and syndicalist tradition has influenced people from all 
walks of life. A notable figure was Bernard L.E. Sigamoney, born in 1888. The grandson of 
indentured Indian labourers, who arrived in South Africa in the 1870s, he became a school 
teacher with a working class outlook. ---- A hundred years ago saw the First World War 
(1914-1918) sear the globe: almost 40 million died. South Africa, as part of the British 
Empire, sent troops and workers to battles in Africa and Europe. ---- The country was hard 
hit by the war?s economic disruptions. As food supplies ran short, Sigamoney began 
addressing protests in Durban. He met the local section of the International Socialist 
League (ISL) ? an influential revolutionary syndicalist group that opposed the war as a 
conflict between European imperialists and capitalists, in which the working class did the 
dying.

The ISL championed the rights of workers of colour and wanted workers? control of 
production through unions. In March 1917, it formed a syndicalist Indian Workers? 
Industrial Union (IWIU) in Durban, with members on the docks, in garment work and 
laundries, painting, hotels and catering and tobacco.

Sigamoney was one of the Durban Indians who joined the ISL; he was the new union?s first 
secretary. A very well-known figure, he chaired a major left congress in October 1917 and 
addressed the 1918 ISL conference. Sigamoney, the ISL and the IWIU supported IWIU waiters 
on strike in 1919, the 1920 strike by the independent Tobacco Workers? Union and the 
Indian furniture workers? strike in 1921. Sigamoney was investigated by police for 
instigating the 1918 strikes by black African dockworkers, but was cleared.

In the 1920s, Sigamoney returned to his family?s church, becoming a radical Anglican 
minister. He associated with the Industrial and Commercial Workers Union (ICU), a massive 
movement that was partly influenced by syndicalism. In his later years, he was active in 
anti-apartheid activities, especially around sports. He worked with figures like Albert 
Luthuli and led the 1962 campaign against apartheid South Africa?s participation in the 
Olympics as chair of the South African Non-Racial Olympic Committee (SANROC).

Sigamoney died in 1963, a life well spent.