Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

The Apartheid System of South Africa

Powerful Essays
1198 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Apartheid System of South Africa
The Apartheid System of South Africa p117 There are some places where control is total. South Africa. If you are black. Here the power of the state and the power of a dominant race have reached a crisis point, a web of restraint unmatched in history. Even as it crumbles, the omnipotence of this system is awesome. One sees it best through the eyes of the black youth of the townships, its greatest victims and over the last decade, its most determined enemies. Like that of their parents', these children's very presence was illegal under apartheid. Nearly everywhere black existence itself was against the law of the invader - white South Africans, who comprise only 5 percent of the population, had appropriated 87 percent of the land mass to themselves, including all major cities, permitting South African blacks, who comprise 95 percent of the total population, only small parcels of arid soil for black "homelands," compulsory reservations.

Under the apartheid system, a series of laws made it technically illegal for blacks to appear anywhere else at all, since their presence outside the slender reserves of land allotted to them might be a criminal offense. However, this land could not support them, and the only opportunities for survival and employment lay in the white districts where their labor was needed and counted upon by the white economy. So, while on the one hand their presence anywhere outside the reserves was forbidden, on the other hand the very operation of white society depended upon exploiting them as its work force. Blacks were forced to lurk in shantytowns outside white population centers in supposedly clandestine if not invisible settlements in order to serve the white population. Hence the townships. And the pass system.

Passes were complex and difficult to get-you needed a job to get one, you couldn't get a job without one, as a result, few residents of the townships actually had a pass. A valid passbook involved a strict correctitude of job description and hours, it had to be current and regularly renewed. The bureaucratic regulations, details, and updates of passes were very arcane. To satisfy them required days of waiting in line, days one missed work. Therefore, very few of the hundreds of thousands of blacks crouched near white cities in the only hope of subsistence employment were there legally. The great mass were subject to arrest and imprisonment at any time.

All township residents, legal or illegal, were subject to search and seizure at any moment. Life under such surveillance and the danger of imminent and violent attack was a nightmare. Especially so after dark. And for children living in abject poverty and housed in conditions that resemble those of domestic animals, sleeping in shacks without clothes or beds or sanitary facilities, it was a nightmare of enormous proportion.

p123
There is something amazing in the way that children have become the rebellion in black South Africa, its troops, its soul. It is a new turn in history for youth to take such a leading role. But the struggle has been a long one. In Amandla, Miriam Tlali's novel of the student protests in Soweto, outside Johannesburg, a character outlines the course of events which led to apartheid: "With the discovery of gold and diamonds, the inevitable was on the way. For the Africans, the die was cast. It was only a matter of time and they would be robbed of all their land. These same raw materials, the mineral resources which have to be tapped by the use of African cheap labor (the main prop of this Apartheid system) are now the trump card." White control was consolidated in one piece of legislation after another: the Land Act of 1936; the Color Bar Act of 1926; the Native Administration Act of 1927, maintaining tribalism with chiefs to act as agents of white rule; the Conciliatory Act of 1924, whereby whites were allowed trade unions excluding blacks, who were not permitted to strike. Then came the legislation creating the "homelands" and, finally, influx control and the pass laws.

The system of apartheid was an extension of Nazi racial method and, like its predecessor, did not neglect education; legal categories and legislation were set up: "Colored Education," "Indian Education," and finally "Bantu Education," all of which promoted racial myth and ensured a deliberately inferior education to create a servant class.

It was over the issue of education-specifically the issue of the language of instruction-that the system broke into pieces in 1976, when the Department of Bantu Education suddenly decreed that all black schools had to teach Afrikaans instead of English, depriving black youth of a world language and imprisoning them in the language of their oppressors.

125
The rebellion had begun in Alexandria, outside Johannesburg, but in a few days it had spread to the other black ghettos of Pretoria, Durban, Port Elizabeth, Cape Town. There is no school, there is widespread looting, riot. Then a boycott, enforced by youngsters, which has devastating effects upon the white economy. Strange forces are now engaged. A war has been declared upon the young. It will go on for a long time. Still more curious, the children will triumph stage by stage, the attempt to impose Afrikaans will fail, and the example of courage and determination of its young people will inspire Soweto and finally a whole nation to resist and in time to resist successfully against the enormous machinery of their oppression.

But the costs were staggering even from the first; thousands of children are imprisoned under the laws permitting detention without trial. There is mass arrest and incarceration of the young. Detention without charges or trial have proven everywhere to create the circumstances of torture. South Africa is ~) the first place this abuse of law has given rise to the widespread torture of children. As apartheid reasserts its control, the arrests begin; the army raids classrooms searching for "ringleaders," soldiers invading homes to pit child against child by bringing youngsters they have arrested and terrorized along with them, knocking on doors and pushing the small hooded figure into the room. The hood has slits so the child can see but not be seen and is given orders to identify his or her friends. The child inside this hood has been interrogated, beaten, put through solitary confinement and electric shock torture. A prisoner may be returned to these conditions whatever he does: but what if the hood disguised and protected him, what if pointing out another student could free him?

Children are hunted down and arrested merely for attending each other's funerals; expressions of collective grief are forbidden and taken as resistance (Tlali describes how)two girls who have been pursued from Doorknob cemetery into a private house are caught hiding in a bedroom by security police: "They dragged them both out, hitting them, and pushed them into a van full of other sobbing kids, and drove them to Protea Police Station.... They locked them-about forty of them- into a small room with black-painted walls. They kept them there, confined in that small place, for hours and hours on end. It would become so hot, sweat was just running all over their bodies . . . like being baked in an oven."

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    APWH DBQ Apart

    • 745 Words
    • 2 Pages

    During 1948 and 1994 Apartheid was a system of racial segregation enforced by the government of South Africa. The rights of the majority non-whites were restricted while the minority white population was maintained. These documents show economic, political, and social relations.…

    • 745 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For those that are not aware, America’s education system is experiencing a dilemma that is going unnoticed. Schools today are not just being inadequately funded, or overcrowded, but something more interesting. Jonathan Kozol explains the issue at hand in his book, The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America.…

    • 794 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Segregation also ran rampant during this time period, thus paving the way for laws to be made that instituted apartheid. These laws were specifically made for discrimination of public facilities, such as: separate drinking fountains, bathrooms, hotels, and restaurants. The courts believed that isolated, but equal facilities were constitutional; however, people now know that they were everything but equal. Many people wonder why there was even segregation in the first place, for it says in the Declaration of Independence, “all men are created equal.” To the courts and whites, segregation was used as a way to enhance and underline racial boundaries; it was an effort that whites used to emphasize that African Americans were vastly different than them, no matter what they thought, they were different “creatures.”…

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    apartheid which occurred due to the separation of camps - which isolated the Chinese from the…

    • 632 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    During the period of the 1950’s, black people were discriminated against and received unfair treatment because of white people’s opinion on the race. Black people at the time had to live in very bad conditions, health, housing and school wise. It was enforced very harshly that white and black people (or people of colour) to be separated. This washarsher in the south due to the fact they were more openly racist than the north of America. This is due to slavery as most farms were founded in the south. White people still wanted to hold onto there belief of power and higher status. In 1863 Abraham Lincoln abolished slavery. In 1890s there was a marked increase in laws…

    • 1931 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sugar Cane Alley

    • 1413 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In Southern Rhodesia there was a system called the compound system. In this compound system the goal was for total control, but they figured that was to far, so they attempted to control every aspect of the migrants that were rounded up by the RNLB. Unlike Sugar Cane Alley, the compound system was made of a three-tier system where there was the local population, migrants, and the forced laborers. In Sugar Cane Alley people are not forced to work, they work to live, and its just two rows of shacks full of people who can leave go as they please. But in Southern Rhodesia they wanted to lengthen the labor cycle and prevent mobility so they don’t move north for higher wages so they create laws within the system.…

    • 1413 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Apartheid in South Africa

    • 2344 Words
    • 10 Pages

    By the late 1800s England, France, Spain, Germany, and Portugal, had explored and colonized territories all over the world. This Age of Exploration resulted in Europeans gaining much experience regarding maritime exploration and colonization. Africa was one of the last regions exposed to European influence because European territories there were viewed as of marginal importance up until 1870. The discovery of precious metals in South Africa in 1870 was the decisive event which captured the attention of the Europeans capitalists and accelerated its colonization. (Silver NP) The economic boom resulting from Industrialization, the technological advantage Europeans then possessed, and the fact that individuals as well as governments were seeking new business opportunities changed the nature of colonization. Therefore the 19th century conquest of South…

    • 2344 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Jim Crow Laws

    • 1150 Words
    • 5 Pages

    were more reasons, like pure racism. Cities had ghettos where all of the blacks lived in a…

    • 1150 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Segregation of black ethnicities does not exist in the sense of being a legally enforced and mandated system by official governments, since South Africa had repealed all laws regarding apartheid back in 1991. But segregation does exist as a form of mentality or subconsciousness. For instance, in the city of Chicago, the area is still divided into several isolated neighborhoods, for Hispanics, African Americans, Asians, and lesbians and gays. And the community of African American is clustered in the southern part of the city, and is oftentimes associated with violence, disorder, and public insecurity, and white people especially wouldn’t want to be in African American neighborhoods. In South Africa where apartheid has been outlawed for a decade,…

    • 301 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Slavery System

    • 1808 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Slavery was an integral part of the culture and lifestyle of Antebellum America. While mostly prominent in the south and western regions, slavery maintained a presence throughout the entire country in various forms. Through the analysis of multiple first-hand accounts of slavery in this time period, it is possible to gain an ample understanding of the antebellum slavery system, and more importantly the interactions between slaves and their masters. Slave owners were able to enforce their desires and rules through two avenues: physical and mental. Thus, it is important to understand the methods and motivations of enforcement used in these avenues.…

    • 1808 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The topic of segregation in the United States has been a matter of great discussion since the Plessy Supreme court case in 1896. However, there is a much lesser talked about instance of segregation that occurred in South Africa from 1948 to 1994. That instance was called the Apartheid. Apartheid literally translates to “the status of being apart.” It was put into motion by the National Party as a way of upholding white supremacy after World War II. The inhabitants of South Africa were separated into four racial groups: native, white, colored, and Asian. If the groups did not conform voluntarily, they were often forced (sometimes physically) to do so. The segregation did not only end with the grouping of race. All services in South Africa…

    • 300 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    White’s had complete control and this was obvious through torture methods such as lynching, segregation, and Jim Crow laws.…

    • 1294 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The government segregation involving people of color and whites had seemingly infected the morals of many South Africans. Races were gradually banned from living…

    • 980 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Racial Discrimination should be stopped because it is detrimental to both the mental and physical health of its victims, as well as that of society as a whole.…

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aparthied

    • 387 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The Group Areas Act affected the lives of thousands of people, in that many people were forcibly removed from their homes because they were living in mixed race areas that the government had allocated to other races, usually whites. Whole communities were transported by the police to new areas far away from their old homes, which were often bulldozed to the ground. In rural areas any blacks who farmed in white areas were removed, to reduce the competition to white farmers. This had an overwhelming impact on traditional society, which was often based on land ownership and the possession of cattle. Families were broken down by the Pass laws, which made it impossible for a man to bring his family with him when he went to work in town. Men lived in hostels in the townships, while their families stayed at home in poverty in the rural areas. The poverty cycle has been continuous due to unemployment due to lack of skills as a result most parents cannot afford paying for their children school fees and some children may have to leave school in order to get money to feed their family and some choose crime. Because poverty was so widespread, most young men weren't even able to pay a bride price. Not only where the effects of apartheid was bad there were also some good things such as education. Since 1970 the budget for black education was raised by about 30% per year every year, more than any other government department. In the period 1955 -1984 the amount of black school students increased 31 times from 35,000 to 1,096 000. 65% of black South African children were at school compared to Egypt 64%, Nigeria 57%, Ghana52%, Tanzania50% and Ethiopia 29%. In South Africa, the whites built 15 new classrooms for blacks every working day, every year. At 40 children per class it meant space for an additional 600 black students every day (Betty) All of these events and more had irreversible effects in South Africa. But the system of apartheid could not last forever. Inevitably it…

    • 387 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics