It is difficult to say, with any certainty, that Julius Malema’s launch of the EFF was not simply an act of grudge, of ill will against the ANC that occupied his mind for being expelled from the African nationalists. A generous reading may bring us to accept that the creation of the EFF was a promise; a leftist promise to reorient South African politics towards a more just and fair society, that put pressure on the African nationalists towards a more social democratic and pacific order.
Somewhere along the way, Malema, the leader of the EFF, channelled the Italian fascist Benito Mussolini, whose early political career was with the left. Through his father’s leftism, baby Benito’s middle names, Amilcare and Andrea, were in deference to Italian socialist Amilcare Cipriani and Andrea Costa. By his early adulthood, Mussolini became editor of Avanti! (Forward!), the official daily of the Italian Socialist Party.
Mussolini was expelled from the socialists for his drift from orthodox Marxism with its insistence of nonviolence, to the revolutionary authoritarianism of fascism when, in his mind, the Marxists were insufficiently ethno-nationalist and militarist (for Marxism’s objection to World War 1).
Malema saw greater appeal in nativism (a proto-nationalism that in South Africa precludes “non-Africans”), coupled with militarism, to achieve his political power as a nativist revolutionary authoritarian. It was probably at that point at which he bought into Adolf Hitler’s gripes, shared his base motives, and in which Malema would almost 100 years later see great appeal and opportunism.
It was only after they came to power that Mussolini and Hitler (we may add a future president Malema) could mix ‘legal’ state repression with ‘illegal’ squad violence.
A brief note before we proceed. When references are made about “fascism” it’s useful to separate what I refer to as “organic fascists” (Hitler and Mussolini), and the fascists of the post-war years; like Spain’s Generalissimo Franco, or Portugal’s António Salazar, among others. In this essay, I will focus on the organic fascists, on the parallels, homologies and echoes (I can’t be held responsible for people who argue from personal incredulity) that fed their base motives, and how these have by accident or design influenced Malema. It’s useful to bear in mind that almost all despots and dictators do not campaign as despots and dictators, on mass extrajudicial killing and incarceration of opponents.
In a volte face from being mildly infatuated with Hitler, who had her expelled from Nazi Germany, the New York Times’ Dorothy Thompson wrote in 1935: “No people ever recognise their dictator in advance.
“He never stands for election on the platform of dictatorship. He always represents himself as the instrument [of] the Incorporated National Will… When our dictator turns up… he will be one of the boys…”
It was only after they came to power that Mussolini and Hitler (we may add a future president Malema) could mix “legal” state repression with “illegal” squad violence, and when “the police found cause to arrest and harass left-wing political opponents, while the squads could engage in beatings and assassinations to silence other critics”.
The three base motives of Malema, Mussolini and Hitler
Hitler and Mussolini were resentful of the Treaty of Versailles (ostensibly an agreement on peace after World War 1). Somewhat similarly, Malema was vehemently opposed to the peaceful settlement of the 1990s, especially the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (Codesa). All three promoted violence against opponents, especially people and/or media houses they considered to be “puppets” of liberal capitalists.
Hitler believed “the German people” were unfairly targeted at Versailles; he believed his people were neutered at Versailles. He stated openly that the treaty rendered Germany militarily weak, while other European states were allowed to keep or strengthen their forces. He said this made it imperative that the Germans build up their militaries for protection. In terms of the treaty, his army was reduced to 100,000 men, they were not allowed to have tanks, no air force, no submarines and only six capital naval ships. The western regions of the Rhineland were turned into a demilitarised zone where no German soldier or weapon was allowed, with the Allies keeping a presence in the zone for almost 15 years.
The issue of land was of special concern for Hitler. The most prominent examples of the loss of territory were: West Prussia, Posen and Upper Silesia were given to Poland; Alsace-Lorraine was given to France; Malmedy and Eupen were given to Belgium; Northern Schleswig to Denmark and Hultschin to Czechoslovakia. Altogether, Hitler believed the Treaty of Versailles resulted in the German people being sold out to liberal internationalists, left weakened and humiliated. The emphases are important for noting the similarities with, especially, Malema.
Mussolini was greatly inspired by the violence and usurping of power by the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. This, he said, “made anything possible”. Purely by coincidence the victory of the Bolsheviks inspired Mussolini to create his Italian Combat Squads (precursors of the Fascist Party), and violently attacked his political opponents. When he eventually formed the Fascist Party in 1921, he emphasised unity among proto-nationalists and expelled whomever he thought were disloyal. Disloyalty has always been a bone of contention of the EFF leader.
In an SABC report (14 December 2019), under the rubric, Malema “reads the riot act to disloyal members”, he would echo Hitler, and described everyone who disagreed with him (political parties, media houses, etc) as “the puppet of capitalist establishment like the previous government was the puppet of a corrupt family”.
Mussolini suspected that everyone who opposed his Fascists Blackshirts (which will be discussed in detail in a forthcoming essay), were recipients of largesse from “wealthy landowners” – again we see the echoes of Malema’s disdain for “puppets”, “capitalists” and “wealthy landowners”.
It suffices to make the point that the Italians did not get the land they were promised, rightfully or wrongfully, and Malema’s ‘African child’ remains ‘landless’ in the post-Codesa political economy.
Malema’s remarks reported on 14 December 2019 echoed Mussolini’s reference to the press as “scandalous” and asked (rhetorically) about press attacks against his fascists. “The whole nation is asking what the government is doing, the whole nation is asking whether it is governed by men or by puppets.”
Recently Malema added his voice and support for Palestinian people in their seven-decade fightback. While we can bicker over which side has a better political, historical or biblical argument, based on social media and popular media reports, Malema gained a lot of support among Muslims. However, this could be a ploy to get votes among Muslims in the Cape. It is necessary to be wary of how Mussolini “flip-flopped” and almost overnight went from being mildly tolerated by all Italians, to a fascist leader, openly expressing his racism and anti-Semitism, which may well have been the high-water mark of his fascism in 1938.
Speaking at Trieste, which has a story if its own, the French newspaper Le Monde reported, in 2022, that “it was precisely here [in Trieste] facing the sea, that Benito Mussolini delivered the most consequential speech of his career, proclaiming the need for ‘a clear, strict racial consciousness, which establishes not only differences but also legitimate superiorities’. Calling the Jews ‘irreconcilable enemies’ of fascism, he announced the adoption of measures that, in a few days, would condemn Italians of the Jewish faith to a whole range of discriminatory practices: a ban on mixed marriages and exclusion from the public service and a whole range of professions (including journalism) and loss of nationality. In short, it was social death.”
Malema was barely 10 years old when Nelson Mandela and the ruling National Party sat down to discuss a future political dispensation. In 1915, Mussolini left the military and returned to journalism. Neither of the two was significantly involved in politics. But events of 1991, and 1919, would at different times and places (obviously) shape their politics. Codesa represented, to Malema, a selling-out of Africans, and imposition of a liberal capitalist international puppet government on South Africa, and for Mussolini, the Italians achieved a “mutilated victory” after World War 1.
Read more in Daily Maverick: Julius Malema and his Extraordinary, Fanatical Followers, a decade later
Codesa did not return the land to Africans, and the mutilated victory in Italy was brought about by the Europeans and North Americans (also the bétte noire of Malema) who reneged on a range of agreements that would grant or “return” land to Italians once the dust had settled. It is a detailed study, involving several countries and territories, and the reader is encouraged to follow up starting with the 1915 Treaty of London, or go back far enough to Italian claims of irredentism and Garibaldi’s March on Rome in 1862. It suffices to make the point that the Italians did not get the land they were promised, rightfully or wrongfully, and Malema’s “African child” remains “landless” in the post-Codesa political economy.
Pulling it all together, Mussolini, Hitler and Malema shared a base motive that wove together “loss of land”, “humiliation” or “mutilated victory” and a people being “sold out” to “liberal international capitalists” – or in the lexicon of South African politics, to “white monopoly capital”. DM
Next week’s essay will focus on the politics of revenge, and the licence to die and kill.