Apartheid
(1948-1994)
Apartheid is the name of the racial
institution that was established in 1948 by the National Party that governed South
Africa until 1994. The term, which
literally means “apartness,” reflected a violently repressive policy designed
to ensure that whites, who comprised 20% of the nation's population, would
continue to dominate the country.
Although the policy began officially in 1948,
the practice of racial discrimination has deep roots in South African
society. As early as 1788, Dutch colonizers
began establishing laws and regulations that separated white settlers and
native Africans. These laws and regulations continued after the British
occupation in 1795, and soon led to the channeling of Africans into specific
areas that would later constitute their so-called homelands. By 1910, the year
that all of the formerly separate Boer Republics united with the British colony
to become the Union of South Africa, there were nearly 300 reserves for natives
throughout the country.
By 1948, Dr. D.F. Malan, the prime architect
of apartheid, led the National Party in the first campaign that centered on
openly racist appeals to white unity. The Party promised that if elected
it would make permanent these reserves under the joint fundamental principles
of separation and trusteeship. The National Party swept into office, winning 80
seats (mainly from Afrikaner voters), compared to the United Party’s 64
seats.
Soon afterwards the new government instituted
a number of policies in the name of apartheid which sought to “ensure the
survival of the white race” and to keep the different races separate on every
level of society and in every facet of life. One of the first acts passed
was the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act, in 1949, which outlawed marriage
between Europeans and non-Europeans. The following year new legislation
banned sexual intercourse between Europeans and non-Europeans.
Additionally, in 1950, the Malan government passed the Population Registration
Act, which categorized every South African by race, and subsequently required
people to carry with them at all times a card stating their racial
identity. This Act was later modified in 1952, by issuing “reference
books” instead of identification passes. Anyone caught without their
“reference book” was fined or imprisoned.
The Group Areas Act of 1950, however, was the
core of apartheid in South Africa. The act marked off areas of land for
different racial groups, and made it illegal for people to live in any but
their designated areas. Thousands of Africans were uprooted and moved
into racially segregated neighborhoods in cities or to reserves which by the
1970s would be called homelands.
In conjunction with the Reservation of
Separate Amenities Act of 1953, even black workers who during the day worked in
the now residentially white only cities were still required to use different
public transportation, post offices, restaurants, schools, and even separate
doors, benches, and counters. The Natives Urban Areas Act in 1952 and the
Native Labor Act in 1953 placed more restrictions on the black majority in
South Africa.
Three important movements challenged
apartheid. The oldest was the African National Congress (ANC) which
was founded in 1912. The Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) broke
away from the ANC in 1958 and initiated its own campaign against
apartheid. Both groups were eventually banned by the South African
government and forced underground where they began violent campaigns of
resistance. In the late 1960s, the South African Students’ Organization (SASO) was
formed. Today it is known as the Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) in
South Africa.
Apartheid formally ended in 1994 with the
first election which allowed the participation of all adult voters. With
that election Nelson
Mandela became the first black president of
South Africa.
SOURCES
Martin Meredith, In the Name of Apartheid (New York: Harper & Row Publishers,1988);
Mokgethi Motlhabi, Challenge to Apartheid: Toward a Moral National Resistance (Grand Rapids: William B. Erdmann's Publishing Company, 1988); L.E. Neame, The History of Apartheid: The Story of the Colour War in South Africa (New York: London House & Maxwell, 1962); U.S. Department of State: Diplomacy in Action. “The end of apartheid.” http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/time/pcw/98678.htm.
Martin Meredith, In the Name of Apartheid (New York: Harper & Row Publishers,1988);
Mokgethi Motlhabi, Challenge to Apartheid: Toward a Moral National Resistance (Grand Rapids: William B. Erdmann's Publishing Company, 1988); L.E. Neame, The History of Apartheid: The Story of the Colour War in South Africa (New York: London House & Maxwell, 1962); U.S. Department of State: Diplomacy in Action. “The end of apartheid.” http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/time/pcw/98678.htm.
Social Plugin