what compromise was made by black majorty in south africa
Answers
The blacks were forbidden from living in white areas. They could work in white areas only if they had a permit.
Trains, buses, taxis, hotels, hospitals, schools and colleges, libraries, cinema halls, theatres, beaches, swimming pools, public toilets, were all separate for the whites and blacks. This was called segregation.
They could not even visit the churches where the whites worshipped.
Blacks could not form associations or protest against the terrible treatment.
Answer:
The blacks agreed that majority rule would not be absolute. They agreed that the majority would not take away the property of the white minority.Apartheid was the name of a system of racial discrimination unique to South Africa where the white European minority discriminated the native black majority.
The blacks were forbidden from living in white areas. They could work in white areas only if they had a permit.
Trains, buses, taxis, hotels, hospitals, schools and colleges, libraries, cinema halls, theatres, beaches, swimming pools, public toilets, were all separate for the whites and blacks. This was called segregation.
They could not even visit the churches where the whites worshipped.
Blacks could not form associations or protest against the terrible treatment.