Article
Oral History Journal of South Africa https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6670/3872
https://upjournals.co.za/index.php OHJSA ISSN 2663-6670 (Online)
Volume 7 | Number 2 | 2018 | #3872 | 19 pages © Unisa Press 2019
O. R. Tambo in the Period of the ANC’s Illegality
Patrick Shylock Mangashe
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9757-3168
University of Fort Hare, South Africa
pmangashe@gmail.com
Abstract
Oliver Reginald Tambo’s life is best known by his association with the African
National Congress (ANC) and the struggle for liberation, and as having been
the foremost leader of the ANC for most of the period of its illegality. Most
accounts, however, do not mention O. R. Tambo’s religious beliefs, and in this
they pass off an opportunity to highlight what could have been the source of his
individual strength, his spirituality. It is this spirituality that this article seeks to
highlight and whose depth it seeks to explore. It aims to show that Tambo’s
personal religious beliefs were infused with his political outlook and concludes
that this composite belief system provided the strength he exuded throughout
his service to the struggle for liberation in South Africa. The article looks at how
he related to and influenced those he came into contact with, both inside his
organisation, the ANC, its military wing Umkhonto We Sizwe (MK), the
broader alliance, and those who were outside his close political realm. It looks
at how he exercised his leadership qualities, born of his beliefs, under the
pressures thrown up by the struggle, and finally how he grasped the moment at
the point of the conclusion of that phase of the struggle. This article is informed
by a number of sources, including books written on the subject by scholars,
those who shared space with O. R. Tambo, some of his speeches, interviews,
and occasionally the author’s own experience as part of the MK contingent from
the late 1970s.
Keywords: O. R. Tambo; ANC; struggle; leadership; beliefs; religion; Christianity;
ministry; external mission; Mandela; apartheid; Umkhonto; communist
Though a sizable volume of local writings do make mention of Oliver Reginald
Tambo’s (hereafter Tambo) leadership and influence on the African National Congress
(ANC) from the days of his Youth League membership in the 1940s through to the
unbanning of the organisation, a number of his colleagues, friends and observers
mention him more often as part of the ANC leadership collective than single him out as
an individual; however, they rarely dwell on his individual beliefs. Long-time friend