How blacks of south africa fight against the practise of apartheid?
Answers
Explanation:
Nelson Mandela's death on December 5, 2013, is being marked by people around the world. Mandela, the former president of the Republic of South Africa and Nobel Peace laureate, spent more than 40 years—27 of them in prison—as a central figure in the struggle against South Africa's brutal and restrictive racial regime called apartheid. In 1994, shortly after the fall of apartheid, Mandela was elected President of South Africa in a multiracial, democratic election, making him the country's first black president.
Mandela has been an inspirational figure to people around the world—especially to proponents of racial justice and equality. In addition to being an icon of resistance and perseverance, Mandela was also a symbol of peace, having presided over the transition from apartheid to multiracial democracy and having pursued a plan of national reconciliation.
This exercise invites students to think about the history of apartheid in South Africa, the long struggle against it, and Nelson Mandela's legacy as a leader in that struggle. The first reading provides an historical overview of the apartheid system, the origins of the African National Congress, and the freedom struggle against apartheid. This reading describes Mandela's role as an anti-apartheid activist. The second reading examines the fall of apartheid in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the transition to multiracial democracy, and the opening of Nelson Mandela's presidency—particularly his establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Questions for discussion follow each reading.
Following the readings, this lesson includes an extended research and critical thinking activity. Students are invited to do independent or group research on the Jim Crow system of segregation that long prevailed in the American South and to compare and contrast it with South African apartheid.
Apartheid in South Africa
Explanation:
- Apartheid was the name of a system of racial discrimination unique to South Africa..The apartheid system was particularly oppressive for the blacks because they were forbidden from living in white areas. They could work in white areas only if they had a permit.
- The native Blacks of South Africa were discriminated by the white minority. The whites were European settlers who were in large numbers. This racial discrimination is known as Apartheid. The Blacks were segregated in public spaces like schools hospitals, theatres, churches and transport system. They were not treated as equals with the White Europeans. The Blacks fought against this discrimination under the leadership of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress. They enlisted the support of trade unions and also the Communist Party. They held strikes, demonstrations and rallies and were supported by some sensitive whites too. However, the oppressive government continued to arrest, torture and kill many Blacks and colored people. After a long struggle by the Blacks which was attempted by the Whites to be stopped, the government was forced to repeal all discriminatory laws in South Africa. There was a lot of international pressure too for the same.