HISTORY
Thabo Mofutsanyana District Municipality is a Category C municipality located in the
eastern Free State province, and borders on Lesotho and KwaZulu-Natal. It is named after
Edwin Thabo Mofutsanyana, a stalwart of the communist party.
It comprises of six local municipalities:
- Setsoto Local Municipality
- Dihlabeng Local Municipality
- Nketoana Local Municipality
- Maluti-a-Phofung Local Municipality
- Phumelela Local Municipality
- Mantsopa Local Municipality
The N3 and N5 National Roads pass through the district and the famous Golden Gate
is found in the area on the slopes of the Drakensberg Mountains.
Despite all the socio-economic challenges facing this district, the area has huge potential
for tourism development because of its scenic beauty and its rich cultural heritage.
Thabo Mofutsanyana
Edwin Thabo Mofutsanyana was born
in the Witzieshoek area of the Orange Free State in 1899. He worked at various
times as a teacher, a miner, and a full-time political organiser and journalist.
In 1926 he joined the CPSA, becoming one of its most loyal African adherents in
the years that followed. For a period in the early 1930s he studied at the Lenin
School in Moscow. His wife,
Josie Mpama, was the only African woman of note
in the party at this time.
After organising for the
Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) in Potchefstroom in the late
1920s, Mofutsanyana went to Durban as an organiser in 1931 but was deported back
to the Transvaal. For most of the 1930s he was on the party's political bureau,
serving as general secretary until 1939 when
Moses Kotane assumed the position. In the 1940s
he chaired the party's Johannesburg district committee and also served on the
central committee and as editor, from 1945, of Inkululeko, the Communist paper.
He was one of those charged with fomenting the African mineworkers' strike of
1946. In 1937, 1942, and 1948 he ran as a Communist candidate for election to
the Natives' Representative Council but was always defeated. Reserved and slow
of manner, he lacked the dynamism necessary for popularity as a mass leader.
Mofutsanyana attended the meetings
of the
All African Convention (AAC) in 1935 and 1936, each time being
elected to the AAC's executive committee. His more long-term concern, however,
was with building the ANC into an effective organisation, and in 1937 he joined
J. B. Marks,
S. S. Tema, and others in reviving the
Transvaal ANC. Under
A. B. Xuma in the 1940s he served on the
African National Congress's (ANC) national executive committee as an advisor on
labor matters, and in 1943 he was one of the signatories of Africans' Claims.
In 1944 - 1945 he was on the
working committee of the National Anti-Pass Council. A member of Johannesburg's
Orlando township advisory board from the late 1930s, he ran in 1945 for
president of the Location Advisory Boards Congress but was heavily defeated by
the incumbent, R. H. Godlo. In the late 1940s he was active in the Johannesburg
squatter's movement, which had originated in the housing crisis of the war
years.
He was on the Executive Committee
of the Communist Party of South Africa when it was banned and dissolved in 1950,
and was one of the foremost among those who worked to build the South African
Communist Party underground. He went into exile in Lesotho in 1959. In 1992, he
returned to Witzieshoek, where he was born, and, in 1995, he died there.