1 / 13

Apartheid Notes

Apartheid Notes. Ethnic Groups in South Africa. Whites/Afrikaners (British and Dutch) 17% of population Blacks (various African descent) 70% of population Asian (mainly from India) Mixed race groups. What is Apartheid?. Means “apartness” Policy of all-white South African government

garin
Download Presentation

Apartheid Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Apartheid Notes

  2. Ethnic Groups in South Africa • Whites/Afrikaners (British and Dutch) • 17% of population • Blacks (various African descent) • 70% of population • Asian (mainly from India) • Mixed race groups

  3. What is Apartheid? • Means “apartness” • Policy of all-white South African government • Separate, exploit and dominate various nonwhite ethnic groups

  4. Nationalist Party • Pro-apartheid • Won 1984 election • Made apartheid official policy

  5. Apartheid Separation in South Africa • White Society • Wealth, luxury, highest standard of living, attempted to recreate European society in S. African cities and towns • Black Society • Poverty, daily struggle to feed family, denied facilities and opportunities (education, housing, and high-paying jobs)

  6. Rights & Roles of Racial Categories • Whites • Controlled government, industry, agriculture, education, the military and the press • Only 17% of population but owned 87% of land

  7. Rights & Roles of Racial Categories • Asians and Mixed Race Groups • 13% of population • Generally treated better than blacks but worse than whites • Held skilled jobs and completed secondary education • Eventually got right to vote for representatives in their own assemblies • But could not live in white areas or use white facilities

  8. Rights & Roles of Racial Categories • Blacks • Could not vote, received little education • Held menial jobs in mining, agriculture, industry or domestic service • Could not move around the country without “pass books” • Identification documents given by government declaring where each specific nonwhite could live

  9. Discrimination & Segregation • Apartheid made marriage between races illegal until 1980s • Blacks forced to live on reserves called homelands • Poor land limited farming • Government built few facilities, such as factories, modern roads, schools and hospitals

  10. Kjl • Kjl

  11. Impact on Black Families • Most men left homelands to work in white areas • Forced to live apart from families for as long as 11 months of the year • Women who worked outside reserves worked as domestic servants in white homes

  12. Townships • Some black men illegally squatted in poor towns outside of white cities instead of living in reserves • These towns became centers for resistance movements • African National Congress, Pan-African Congress, Black Consciousness movement • Recruited blacks who were frustrated by racism of apartheid

  13. Protests • Apartheid government often reacted violently to protests • Black South Africans resisted apartheid in mass numbers and through many ways • Civil disobedience, strikes, boycotts and nonviolent demonstrations

More Related