Arrival in Africa (1911) David Ivon Jones arrived in South Africa in November 1910, seeking treatment for tuberculosis. viewing their oppressed position in racist South African society as "slaves in everything but name". Despite his sympathetic views for black Africans and the ANC, Jones was at this stage of his life a Liberal Christian activist, and in 1911 he joined a pro-segregationist political party called the "
South African Labour Party" (SALP). Although not yet an anti-capitalist and supporter of communism, he held a deep hatred towards South Africa's
Randlords, the capitalists who monopolised the gold and diamond industries.
The Witwatersrand uprising (1913) During his time in the SALP, many events in South African politics would force him to reconsider his Liberal and Christian beliefs, and pushed him to become a revolutionary communist and an atheist. From May to June 1913, white miners near
Witwatersrand rioted in protest over their working conditions before the riots were suppressed by the
police and military. The government's murder of unarmed and innocent civilians would plunge
Johannesburg into further chaos, crowds rioted and burnt down the railway station and the
Star newspaper. Rioters also looted the city centre, and anti-Indian violence began spreading across South Africa.
Turn towards communism and atheism (1914–1915) In August 1914, Jones was elected the general secretary of SALP, during a time when its membership and popular support was rapidly expanding. He began collecting left-wing political and philosophical publications from Britain, including works by
Karl Marx,
Friedrich Engels,
Karl Kautsky,
H. G. Wells,
Leo Tolstoy,
Ramsay MacDonald, and began studying a vast range of political philosophies, including Marxism. He wrote agitation leaflets for the IWA, addressed to the Bantu, calling for racial equality and proletarian solidarity, however when he could not find a translator the work of translating the leaflets fell upon undercover police spies who had been sent to infiltrate the IWA. The IWA took part in many strikes and industrial disputes in 1918; however, the organisation was crushed via a combination of government repression and police infiltration. Becoming increasingly aware of the potential of black South Africans in the labour movement, Jones prompted the International Socialist League (ISL) to start publishing socialist works in native African languages, demanding equal status for Black Africans in South African workplaces, and challenging colonial racism. Titled
The Bolsheviks are Coming, this leaflet was written and distributed in
Pietermaritzburg, and was addressed "to the workers of South Africa, Black as well as White". Written in English,
Zulu, and
Sotho,
The Bolsheviks are Coming! declared that: "While the Black worker is oppressed, the white worker cannot be free."The publishing of this leaflet would gain the attention of the South African government, which sought to censor its spread and punish the authors for promoting communism and racial equality. Both Jones and Greene were arrested, fined, and sentenced to four months in prison for the crime of publishing
The Bolsheviks are Coming!. However, this sentence was quashed on appeal. This court case is notable for being the first major court case against communism in South African history. == Departure from Africa to Europe (1920–1924) ==