Political Science, asked by kashmir8244, 11 months ago

Who were blacks, whites and coloured or non white people in South Africa

Answers

Answered by karan511671
47

Answer:

Here is your answer

The word “Coloured” was a social category rather than a legal designation and typically indicated a status intermediate between those who were identified as “white” and those who were identified as “black.”

These discrimination is ended by Nelson Mandela. he is the one who follow Gandhi ji and work like that..

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Answered by Anonymous
38

The boy of fair skin - but not what is called white in South Africa - came home from school the other day and told his mother, who is dark of skin, that blacks smelled bad.

As she recounted the story, the mother told her 4-year-old son, the child of a white man and a dark-skinned woman, that his assessment was wrong. After all, she said, she was black and did not smell bad.

But the boy persisted, she said, saying he loved his father because he was white like him and did not love his mother. So she told the boy a truth derived from South Africa's web of racial definitions: Despite the fact that he looked the same as his friends who were technically white, he was not white.

''He cried and cried and said: 'What am I?' '' the mother said. Because of his parentage, the answer in South African law would be ''colored.'' And his cry might be echoed by many others in this land of racial distinction

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