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====Black People's Convention==== In August 1971, Biko attended a conference on "The Development of the African Community" in [[Edendale, KwaZulu-Natal|Edendale]].{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=185}} There, a resolution was presented calling for the formation of the [[Black People's Convention]] (BPC), a vehicle for the promotion of Black Consciousness among the wider population. Biko voted in favour of the group's creation but expressed reservations about the lack of consultation with South Africa's Coloureds or Indians.{{sfnm|1a1=Woods|1y=1978|1p=97|2a1=Mangcu|2y=2014|2pp=186β187}} A. Mayatula became the BPC's first president; Biko did not stand for any leadership positions.{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=188}} The group was formally launched in July 1972 in [[Pietermaritzburg]].{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=188}} By 1973, it had 41 branches and 4000 members, sharing much of its membership with SASO.{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=189}} {{Quote box | quote = My major problem at this moment is a strange kind of guilt. So many friends of mine have been arrested for activities in something that I was most instrumental in starting. A lot of them are blokes I spoke into the movement. And yet I am not with them. One does not think this way in political life of course. Casualties are expected and should be bargained for. | source=β Steve Biko{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=211}} | align = left | width = 25em }} While the BPC was primarily political, Black Consciousness activists also established the Black Community Programmes (BCPs) to focus on improving healthcare and education and fostering black economic self-reliance.{{sfn|Hadfield|2010|p=83}} The BCPs had strong ecumenical links, being part-funded by a program on Christian action, established by the [[Christian Institute of Southern Africa]] and the [[South African Council of Churches]].{{sfn|Hadfield|2010|p=83}} Additional funds came from the [[Anglo American plc|Anglo-American Corporation]], the International University Exchange Fund, and Scandinavian churches.{{sfn|Hadfield|2010|p=84}} In 1972, the BCP hired Biko and [[Bokwe Mafuna]], allowing Biko to continue his political and community work.{{sfn|Hadfield|2010|p=84}} In September 1972, Biko visited [[Kimberley, Northern Cape|Kimberley]], where he met the PAC founder and anti-apartheid activist [[Robert Sobukwe]].{{sfnm|1a1=Woods|1y=1978|1p=152|2a1=Mangcu|2y=2014|2p=119}} Biko's banning order in 1973 prevented him from working officially for the BCPs from which he had previously earned a small stipend, but he helped to set up a new BPC branch in Ginsberg, which held its first meeting in the church of a sympathetic white clergyman, [[David Russell (bishop)|David Russell]].{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|pp=205, 215}} Establishing a more permanent headquarters in Leopold Street, the branch served as a base from which to form new BCPs; these included self-help schemes such as classes in literacy, dressmaking and health education.{{sfnm|1a1=Woods|1y=1978|1pp=56β57|2a1=Hadfield|2y=2010|2p=84}} For Biko, community development was part of the process of infusing black people with a sense of pride and dignity.{{sfn|Hadfield|2010|p=80}} Near King William's Town, a BCP Zanempilo Clinic was established to serve as a healthcare centre catering for rural black people who would not otherwise have access to hospital facilities.{{sfnm|1a1=Woods|1y=1978|1p=57|2a1=Hadfield|2y=2010|2p=79|3a1=Mangcu|3y=2014|3pp=218β221}} He helped to revive the Ginsberg crΓ¨che, a daycare for children of working mothers,{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=227}} and establish a Ginsberg education fund to raise bursaries for promising local students.{{sfnm|1a1=Bernstein|1y=1978|1p=9|2a1=Mangcu|2y=2014|2p=224}} He helped establish Njwaxa Home Industries, a leather goods company providing jobs for local women.{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=222}} In 1975, he co-founded the Zimele Trust, a fund for the families of political prisoners.{{sfnm|1a1=Bernstein|1y=1978|1p=9|2a1=Woods|2y=1978|2p=69}} Biko endorsed the unification of South Africa's black liberationist groups{{snd}}among them the BCM, PAC, and [[African National Congress]] (ANC){{snd}}in order to concentrate their anti-apartheid efforts.{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=234}} To this end, he reached out to leading members of the ANC, PAC, and [[Unity Movement (South Africa)|Unity Movement]].{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=244}} His communications with the ANC were largely via [[Griffiths Mxenge]],{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=244}} and plans were being made to smuggle him out of the country to meet [[Oliver Tambo]], a leading ANC figure.{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=245}} Biko's negotiations with the PAC were primarily through intermediaries who exchanged messages between him and Sobukwe;{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|p=246}} those with the Unity Movement were largely via [[Fikile Bam]].{{sfn|Mangcu|2014|pp=247β148}}
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