Abahlali baseMjondolo

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Abahili baseMjondolo, meaning "people of the shacks" in Zulu, is an anti-authoritarian movement in South Africa. As of 2021, they had "more than 100 000 members in 86 branches across five provinces."[1]

The Abahlali movement maintains numerous communes which make decisions based on consensus. Influenced by Franz Fanon and the southern African concept of ubuntu (meaning humanness), the Abahlali philosophy is communist and non-electoral. They are fiercely independent of political parties and NGOs.[2]

Abahlali baseMjondolo describes their strategy for implementing socialism from below:

"We are working to build socialism from below. We are working to establish, develop and defend and link communes on occupied land. It is only when the communes are strong enough to build socialism from below that the people will be able to take power from the thugs and real freedom will be realised."[3]

The movement began in 2005 when shack dwellers facing eviction in Durban seized a major road for several hours. They were brutally beaten back by police. Residents began electing autonomous committees, and committees in twelve sites declared on October 4th that they'd established the Abahlali baseMjondolo movement.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

Economy

At the eKhenena encampment, with about 80 families in 2020:

"There is a bold red sign at the entrance, a self-constructed road; a collective tap providing self-organised access to the municipal water system, similar arrangements to access electricity; a farm with irrigations trenches, vegetables and chickens; a democratically run co-operative to distribute the produce from the farm, sell the excess and distribute the income; an office; a recreation center for young people with a pool table and satellite television; and a political school, painted red and named in honour of Frantz Fanon. All residents are expected to cook and eat four meals a week together, and to rally to the defence of the occupation when it is attacked.


  1. Abahlali baseMjondolo, "The country goes deeper into crisis as the unemployment rate increases," 7 June 2021, http://abahlali.org/node/17306/.
  2. Richard Pithouse "From Durban to the World," American Philosophical Association, 25 December 2020, https://blog.apaonline.org/2020/12/25/from-durban-to-the-world/.
  3. Abahlali baseMjondolo, "The country."