In the years after Black Wednesday, many BPC and Black Consciousness activists became active in the
Azanian People's Organisation (Azapo) and its subsidiary organisations. Azapo was founded in April 1978 in
Roodepoort as an offshoot of the Soweto Action Council, which had been formed in Chiawelo,
Soweto, shortly after the 1977 crackdown. Like the BPC, Azapo was closed to whites and strongly opposed participation in the apartheid system – it even inherited the BPC's slogan, "One Azania, one people" – but it was more rigidly
Marxist than the BPC. BPC and Black Consciousness activists in
exile joined the Black Consciousness Movement of Azania (BCMA), established in London as Azapo's external wing before BCMA and Azapo formally merged in 1994. In the 1980s and early 1990s, however, the popularity of
Congress-aligned organisations increased and Black Consciousness organisations (though not necessarily Black Consciousness ideologies) declined in influence. When Azapo was itself banned in 1988, many more Black Consciousness-aligned youths left South Africa and joined the
Pan Africanist Congress and
African National Congress, in order to receive military training in exile. == Notable members ==