south african apartheid

32
South African South African Apartheid Apartheid

Upload: amelia

Post on 06-Jan-2016

68 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

South African Apartheid. What is it?. A South African policy of complete legal separation of the races Banned all social contact between blacks and whites Allowed the ruling white minority to control and terrorize the black majority This is all LEGAL!. What does it look like?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: South African Apartheid

South African Apartheid South African Apartheid

Page 2: South African Apartheid

What is it?What is it?• A South African policy of complete legal

separation of the races

• Banned all social contact between blacks and whites

• Allowed the ruling white minority to control and terrorize the black majoritythe black majority

• This is all LEGAL!This is all LEGAL!

Page 3: South African Apartheid

What does it look like?

Write a caption for what the person in the picture is thinking…

Page 4: South African Apartheid
Page 5: South African Apartheid

• All citizens were classified by race (LAW).

• A Black South African must carry a passbook issued by the white Government (LAW).

• Blacks were required to carry passes that determined where they could live and work.

Page 6: South African Apartheid
Page 7: South African Apartheid

• The Group Areas Act… It forced people of certain races into living in designated areas.

• There were racially segregated beaches and public areas (LAW).

• Race laws touched every aspect of social life, including prohibiting marriage between non-whites and whites and the sanctioning of “white-only'' jobs (LAW).

Page 8: South African Apartheid
Page 9: South African Apartheid

•The government designated white and colored areas.

•This is a white school campus…look at the buildings and the field.

•Schools were segregated and black schools had to teach the “white” curriculum. (LAW)•http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-f60oe_xScs&feature=related (Sarafina 9:46)

Page 10: South African Apartheid
Page 11: South African Apartheid

• The government separated residential areas.

• Blacks were relocated to new “homelands”…usually the poorest areas with horrible farm land (LAW).

• South African citizenship was taken away and black townships had curfews.

• These are houses in Soweto, a black township.

Page 12: South African Apartheid

More Laws…• Blacks could NOT vote or own property (LAW)• Each black homeland controlled its own separate

education, health and police system. • Blacks were not allowed to buy hard liquor. They were

able to buy poor quality beer• Public beaches, swimming pools, bridges, drive-ins,

graveyards, parks, and public toilets were segregated (LAW)

• Movie theatres in white areas were not allowed to admit blacks…there were practically no cinemas in black areas

• Restaurants and hotels in white areas were not allowed to admit blacks except as staff

• Black Africans were prohibited from attending white churches

Page 13: South African Apartheid
Page 14: South African Apartheid
Page 15: South African Apartheid

• Segregated public facilities in Johannesburg, 1985.

• Schools were segregated and students learned white curriculum and spoke in Afrikaaners language of the white Dutch settlers (LAW).

• Black schools were intentionally under-funded.

Page 16: South African Apartheid
Page 17: South African Apartheid

Apartheid video clipsApartheid video clips

http://www.youtube.com/watch?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZnetAveDLM (Cry Freedom beginning to v=gZnetAveDLM (Cry Freedom beginning to

trial)trial)http://www.youtube.com/watch?http://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=KRaFRCAPWJk (Sarafina 16:20 – 45:26)v=KRaFRCAPWJk (Sarafina 16:20 – 45:26)

Page 18: South African Apartheid

What was it like in South Africa?

• How did the blacks of South Africa live?– What were some laws?– Describe life for the blacks…– WATCH CRY FREEDOM and make a list

Page 19: South African Apartheid

Apartheid Day 2

Rise of Resistance Movements

Page 20: South African Apartheid

What would you do?What would you do?

Would you consider fighting back? How? You have no rights, no

power…

Page 21: South African Apartheid
Page 22: South African Apartheid

• Children of Soweto, a Black township some ten miles away from Johannesburg, in 1982. The Zulu world "Amandla" scrawled on the wall means "Power". This was adopted as a rallying call in the struggle for Black rights.

Page 23: South African Apartheid

Resistance Movements

• The African National Congress was established (ANC) organized marches, boycotts and strikes

• Student peaceful protests and women boycotted “white” stores and the buses

• Black Consciousness

Page 24: South African Apartheid

ResistanceResistance

• 1960 Sharpeville Massacre- 69 people (women and students) killed by South African police

• 1974- SA expelled from UN and 1976- banned from Olympics

• 1976- student protests- 600 killed, thousands arrested

Page 25: South African Apartheid

Steven BikoSteven Biko• Black Consciousness

leader who believed that political freedom could only come to black South Africans if and when they begin to stop feeling inferior to whites

• Raised awareness around world to the issue of apartheid

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yo4aX2veRVY (trial speech)

Page 26: South African Apartheid

Steven Biko

• Arrested, put on trial, and died Sept. 22, 1977 from head wounds while in police custody

• Since his death in police custody, he has been called a martyr of the anti-apartheid movement

• While living, his writings and activism attempted to empower black people, and he was famous for his slogan "black is beautiful", which he described as meaning: "man, you are okay as you are, begin to look upon yourself as a human being".

• Considered a hero

Page 27: South African Apartheid

Steven BikoSteven Biko• He wasn’t the devil, as they made him out to be.

He was a man, just like you and me. Yet he suffered immense pain and deadly injuries to insure no others would have to see the horror he saw before he ceased to breathe.  

God Bless Stephen Biko  

          -Steve Shep

• Peter Gabriel and Biko

Page 28: South African Apartheid

Nelson MandelaNelson Mandela

• Born in 1918 to the chief of the Tembu Tribe

• University educated • Received a law degree• Joined African National

Congress in 1944 and helped with the resistance movement

• In 1961 he created a new group within the ANC that wanted to use violent tactics

• He was arrested and after several trials was given life in prison for plotting to overthrow the government (for treason)

Page 29: South African Apartheid

Nelson MandelaNelson Mandela• While in prison he continued to be a symbol and leader

of the resistance movement• President de Klerk was instrumental in releasing

Mandela in February 1990 and allowing the ANC• He and de Klerk worked to create a new constitution

for all people in South Africa• In 1994 Mandela was elected at the first black South

African President…everyone voted!• Mandela and de Klerk won the Nobel Peace Prize in

1993• Invictus

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSpSoO2zsug (Reason above emotion 3:56)

Page 30: South African Apartheid

F.W. de Klerk

• South African president in 1990 (White man)

• Freed Nelson Mandela

• Ended apartheid

• Worked with Mandela to re-write the constitution giving all freedoms and rights

• Won Nobel Peace Prize with Mandela

Page 31: South African Apartheid

FW deKlerk and Nelson Mandela

Page 32: South African Apartheid

Taking a StandTaking a Stand

• Just imagine what one person can do to make a change.

• All it takes sometimes is one brave person to take a stand…

• If Everyone Cared