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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Frene Ginwala

Interviewed November 26, 2024

Well, even before that, the excitement, for most of us, we’d never voted before [1994]. So – but it was more the significance of – for the first time we were voting for somebody. That was very important. We had massive election campaigns, posters, we were going around the country talking about elections. We found suddenly that people were being told that you mustn’t put a cross on the ballot paper. You just put a tick. Cross means you didn’t, but in fact, you had to put a cross, you see, so we were also then trying to counter that kind of publicity.

We were trying to ensure that at particularly the farm workers, they should be allowed to vote, so you had to go politically and talk to the farm owners and so on and say people should be allowed. The independent electoral commission was doing that, but we as ANC [African National Congress], people were being deployed to go to this community, to go there, speak to them, reassure them about the ANC, because for a lot of people it was strange. And so it was – apart from the general buzz, it was that kind of thing, working out what should we be doing, and so on and countering anything that was happening.

[South Africa’s first democratic, non-racial parliamentary elections occurred in 1994. Nelson Mandela was unanimously elected by the new parliament as the first post-apartheid president. The ANC is a political party that served as the most prominent resistance movement against South Africa’s apartheid system, at times resorting to violence through its military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe. It was officially banned by the South African government from 1960 to 1990. As apartheid collapsed, the ANC’s leader, Nelson Mandela, was elected President of South Africa in 1994 and established a democratic government.]

Most of us voted two or three days before because we knew we had to be monitoring the voting stations on the day, so we voted two or three days before. It was, you know, quite something. I kept looking at the paper.

Did I put the right cross? But it was – and most all of us were feeling this because when we were talking before and after, we saw this. And then, on Election Day itself, and it was more than one day, you would go there early in the morning to whichever stations you were monitoring, checking with their ballot papers, was everything okay, what was happening, talking to people in the queue. We were not allowed to campaign in the precincts of the election, but the queues were way outside, and reassuring them.