South African Native National Congress delegation photographed in 1914

South African leaders found Native National Congress to challenge racial injustice

On January 8, 1912 C.E., a group of lawyers, teachers, editors, and ministers gathered in Bloemfontein to build something southern Africa had never seen before. The Native National Congress would be a political home for Black South Africans across tribal, regional, and class lines.

Eleven years later, it would take the name the world now knows — the African National Congress.

The founders included Pixley ka Isaka Seme, Sol Plaatje, John Langalibalele Dube, and Walter Rubusana. Dube, a Zulu minister and educator trained in the United States, was elected the organization’s first president.

Key findings

  • Native National Congress: The organization was established on January 8, 1912 C.E., in Bloemfontein, drawing delegates from across southern Africa.
  • Founding leadership: Seme, Plaatje, Dube, and Rubusana led the gathering, with King Jongilizwe of the Xhosa donating 50 cows in support.
  • Original purpose: Racial injustice under the 1910 Union of South Africa had stripped Black citizens of land and political voice, and the Congress formed to push back through petition, organization, and legal challenge.

Why 1912 C.E. mattered

Two years earlier, the Union of South Africa had been created by merging four British colonies. The new government extended voting rights to white settlers while preparing the Natives Land Act of 1913, which would restrict Black South Africans — who made up most of the population — to roughly seven percent of the country’s land.

The founders saw what was coming. They also saw that resistance organized along ethnic lines — Zulu, Xhosa, Sotho, Tswana — would fail against a unified colonial state.

Seme, a Columbia and Oxford-trained lawyer, put it directly at the founding meeting: “We are one people.”

A movement built by writers and teachers

The early Congress was led by people fluent in the tools of modern politics — newspapers, petitions, legal briefs, and international appeals. Sol Plaatje, the organization’s first general secretary, was a journalist, linguist, and the first person to translate Shakespeare into Setswana.

His 1916 book Native Life in South Africa documented the devastation of the Land Act and remains a foundational text of South African journalism.

Dube ran the Ohlange Institute, the first educational institution in South Africa founded and run by a Black South African. Rubusana was a minister and the only Black member ever elected to the Cape Provincial Council under the old qualified franchise.

These were not fringe radicals. They were pillars of their communities who had watched the legal ground shift beneath them.

Lasting impact

The organization founded that January day would outlast the empire that ignored it. Over the next eight decades, the Congress evolved from a petitioning body into a mass movement, survived a 30-year ban, operated from exile in Tanzania and Zambia, and helped negotiate the end of apartheid.

In 1994 C.E., Nelson Mandela — who joined the ANC Youth League in 1944 C.E. — became the first democratically elected president of South Africa. The Freedom Charter, adopted at Kliptown in 1955 C.E., shaped the post-apartheid constitution, now considered one of the most progressive founding documents in the world.

Beyond South Africa, the Congress became a reference point for liberation movements across the African continent. The United Nations anti-apartheid campaign, one of the most successful international human rights efforts of the 20th century, drew directly on its organizing.

Blindspots and limits

The early Congress was deeply conservative in ways that shaped its first decades. Its founders were mission-educated professionals who initially directed their appeals to the British Crown and excluded women from full membership until 1943 C.E.

Rural communities, workers, and women’s organizations like the Bantu Women’s League led by Charlotte Maxeke often pushed the Congress to be bolder than it wanted to be.

In the decades since democracy, the ANC has also faced serious and ongoing allegations of corruption, and its share of the national vote has declined steadily since 2004 C.E. — a reminder that founding a movement for justice is not the same as sustaining one.

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For more on this story, see: African National Congress

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