I'm no particularly fan of George Orwell's fictional writings, especially Animal Farm, which I never really liked even at school where I first read it. Methinks Orwell was at his strongest in non-fiction writings. I'm surprised when many people today make such a big deal about T.S. Elliot's rejection of the manuscript of Animal Farm while he was still working as a director for publishing at Faber and Faber. I'd have done the same; perhaps in retrospect, for commercial reasons, I may now think twice.
I would not have followed Elliot's reasoning, but taking things in their context I understand him. It was after all 1944, Britain was an ally of the Soviet Union against Hitler's Germany. Elliot acknowledged the good writing and what he called the "fundamental integrity" of the manuscript, even if he said its viewpoint was a caricature of Stalin's authoritarian government, calling non convincingly Trotskyite. At one point he wrote; "After all, your pigs are far more intelligent than the other animals, and therefore the best qualified to run the farm - in fact there couldn't have been an Animal Farm at all without them: so that what was needed (someone might argue) was not more communism but more public-spirited pigs."
The Secretary of the SACP, Blade Nzimande, would beg to differ; he thinks what's needed is more communists. He and his clique loathe ‘public-spirited pigs'; only their terms are more uncouth, calling them counter-revolutionary, snakes, cockroaches and all. Generally the ANC and its alliance partners regard as blasphemy any people who dare criticize the Party. Worse still is the SACP with its antipathy towards dialogue.
Dr. Nzimande recently wrote in their online journal, Umsebenzi; "The electoral victory [of the ANC] was also a massive failure of collaboration by sections of the elite, almost wholly supported by all of mainstream media, including the public broadcaster, to use the 'rooi gevaar', the 'two-thirds gevaar', and the 'threat to the constitution gevaar' to try and dislodge the ANC electorally." He further says "In many ways these election results are an expression of the growing class cleavage in wider society between the haves (including now a small black group of tycoons as represented by Cope) and the have-nots."
This has been a rather dubious practise of the SACP under the helm of Nzimande, to throw allegations of populist tendencies in an attempt to posture itself as the movement of the people-something strongly disregarded by its membership toll. If we take Dr. Nzimande in his word there are now more than 600 000 [Cope membership] black tycoons in South Africa (disregarding those inside their alliance).
This is probably why he says "a deeper reflection on the ideological and class struggles on the electoral terrain also brings out into the open the extent of collusion by these elites against the ANC. Their main plank was that our constitution was under threat from an ANC government." Where is this deeper reflection; why doesn't Dr. Nzimande share it with us? This habit of pointing to unsubstantiated things through straw-mat thinking is what is most disappointing about the SACP, and the reason why, with all its populist howling, it is stagnant as the party.