In 1969, when organized black opposition to apartheid was virtually quiet, university students formed an exclusively black student organization, the South African Students Organization (SASO). This was the beginning of the Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) that focused on cultivating the ability of black people to change the oppressive situation in South Africa by rejecting the ideology (and eventually the system) of apartheid. Black Consciousness (BC) adherents sought to liberate black people psychologically through “conscientization,” or the realization of black self-worth and the need for black activism. They stressed economic self-reliance and a return to African culture and values. They also redefined “black” to include all people of color who experienced racial discrimination under apartheid, and they worked to create a united black front.
The BCM re-energized resistance to apartheid and spawned a number of political and community organizations. For example, the Black People’s Convention (BPC) acted as an umbrella organization and political wing and the Black Community Programs (BCP) focused on black community development. The death in detention of Steve Biko (one of the founders of the movement) and the subsequent banning of BC organizations and leaders in 1977 halted the movement as it was known in the 1970s. BC adherents formed the Azanian People’s Organation (AZAPO) in 1978, which sought to carry on the work of the BPC, but put greater emphasis on workers and economic socialism. The Azanian Youth Organization (AZAYO) and the Black Consciousness Movement of Azania (BCMA, an external organization until 1994) are among other post-1977 BCM organizations that were active throughout the 1980s and 1990s, up to the present day.
From Protest to Challenge: a Documentary History of African Politics in South Africa 1882-1990 By Thomas Karis, Gwendolen Carter, Gail Gerhart [more info]
Black Power in South Africa: The Evolution of an Ideology By Gail Gerhart [more info]