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                       THIS TIME TOMMOROW

(BOOK  ANALYSIS)

          
  
                                       THEMES


 A theme is the main idea or subject in the work of art.
 In “In This Time Tomorrow” by Ngugi wa Thion'go several themes can be analyzed and discussed. These themes includes protest, tribalism, poverty, betrayal, conflict, colonial legacy, building the future, illusion, disillusionment, social differences (stratification), awareness, environment sanitation, ignorances e.t.c.


1.  PROTEST


Protest means the reaction against something or a certain idea. OR Disapproval of something or
 idea since it is unjust.
 In “This Time Tomorrow”protest is the central theme. The protest in the play is caused by dissatisfaction that people have as a result of injustice shown by the government.
 Also some people protest against the new culture ways of life introduced by the whites. For example Njango protest the idea of Wanjiro of behaving like the European lady such as to have a hand bag, high heeled shoes.
 Others protesting against conservatism caused by ignorance of modern ways of life because of old age.
 For example Wanjiro tells his mother that she is old and does not know the ways of the world or the needs of a young woman.


2.   BETRAYAL


 The majority of Kenyans decided to go to the forest to fight for freedom of Kenya because they were promised by their leaders that after independence they will have a good life, for example good jobs and good houses, as well as the land that had been taken away by the white settlers, but after the attainment of UHURU the new government betrays the people. For example one can see that the government has left the people to live a very poor life in slums without helping them.
 It is just the “chosen few” who enjoys the national cake while the majority are living in miserable lives and they lack hope. For example Njango's shelter is made of poor constructive materials that are cardboards and rotting tins. She is sharing the floor with her daughter WANJIRO as bed.
 Also the crowd betrayed the stranger by running away when they saw the police. For example the 2nd customer tells the people at the meeting to run away because the police are coming.
 Moreover WANJIRO betrays her mother by running away with ASINJO despite the protest from her mother. EG WANJIRO tells her mother that she is going away with ASINJO and that he is waiting for her.


 3.HUMILIATION AND DEHUMANIZATION


 The government exercises humiliation to the people through implementing their decision to demolish the slum in the UHURU market. They are doing so without showing them the other place and giving them time to move out of the city comfortably.
 For example the shoe maker says “it is not that I don't want to move, but the government should give me a place to go.”
 This indicate that how people feel humiliated by being forced to go away from their homes while they have not being given another place to live.
 It is mistreatment done by the government by making decisions without involving the majority who are going to be affected by the changes.


 4. NEW CULTURAL ASPECTS

 There is adoption of the new cultural elements in the city, this is mainly accepted by the young generation. There are new ways of dressing like white people which Wanjiro admires. Njango is disturbed by the new dressing style, she asks her daughter “You want to dress like white people?”

5 .TRIBALISM


 Tribalism is another aspect depicted in the play, It is caused by conservatism among some people in the slums due to illiteracy or ignorances.
 Tribalism is seen when Njango refuses her daughter to marry ASINJO because he is from another tribe, so she does not trust him and after all he is not having a job.
 Njango says “With that man? A man from another tribe? A man without a job? No child of mine from my own flesh, will sell her body.”
 This indicates some deep rooted elements of tribalism existing in Kenya and other countries.


6.  IGNORANCE:


This means the lack of knowledge or information on a certain thing.
 The problem of ignorance is seen when some of the slum dwellers can not read and write and also cannot tell when they were born.
 For example the shoe maker tells the journalist “I don't know my age.”
 Also the stranger gets a problems in making people understand him when he tells them. “let us stand together” Because of their ignorance they believe that the stranger can perform his magic to save them.
 1st customer “Why don't we held a meeting with the stranger? He works in magic, will he not blind their eyes?”
 2nd customer, “yes the stranger's magic save us” this also shows ignorance because people believes the stranger can prevent the government from destructing their houses by using magic.



7.    MODERNITY


 This is shown by WANJIRO who desires to wear and work like a European girl. For example she likes to dress like whites, wearing high heels shoes and to have a hand begs.



8. CONSERVATISM


 This is the act of protesting change or new ideas. Njango is conservative in the party, for example she prevents her daughter from marrying a man from another tribe.
 Wanjiro and Asinjo take her to be an old woman who does not know the needs of a young women in the modern time. This shows that Njango is ignorant and hence conservative, as she does not change with time and this is contributed by the fact that she is old.


9. LAND ALIENATION



People protest against land alienation. The land has been taken from them during the colonial time in Kenya. They then decided to go to fight in the forest so as to get back their independence and regain their land that has been taken by the white settlers.
 Even after achieving independence things have not changed, the majority are still landless. The land is in the hands of the few.
 For example the stranger says “We have fought for the land! Where is the land?”
 Therefore this shows that the majority are not owning land, except for the few who are in the government.


10. DISUNITY


 Disunity has also been portrayed in the play. People are not united, that is the reason why they fail in attaining their goal of stopping the government from demolishing their slums. This is seen when the stranger tells the people to stand together and protest against the city council's decision to demolish their slums.
 At first they seem to be together but later, in the face of the police they are seen depressing.
 Example, 1st customer says, “Police!, The police are coming!”
 2nd customer “Run! Run! Run! Run quickly! Out of my way!”


11.COLONIAL LEGACY


The playwright shows us that, still there are colonial elements in the country, especially among the members forming the new government. People do not see changes even after getting UHURU they are jobless and the land has not been given to them as they were promised. The minority are the ones who enjoy the national cake, as they are seen driving expensive Mercedes Benz and long American cars.
 Also the dressing style of the white people has been widely adopted by people in the city. Even Wanjiro admires it and she says “I want a frock and shoes-high-heels- so that I can walk like a European lady.”


12. BUILDING THE FUTURE


This is a struggle or action by an individual or community to bring changes in life.
 The struggle was through Mau Mau movement so as to get independence and regain the land from the white settlers.
 Building the future at family level is shown by Njango who sells soup. She struggles to make sure that they get the necessary requirements of life. In any struggle the secret for success involves strong determination , courage, patience, and unity. If these aspects lack, then there can be failure. Failure in the struggle occurs when people are not united,determined, when there is ignorance, cowardice and lack of weapons.



13. ILLUSION


Illusion is a false idea or belief about somebody or something. For example, in the play, the freedom fighters had illusion or expectation that after the attainment of independence they would be given good jobs, houses and their land. But it is not the way they have been thinking. Things have become quite opposite to their expectation. For example the stranger says “we fought for UHURU because we were told it would mean decent jobs and decent houses.” The expected situation is not realized since after independence people have been suffering, no jobs, no lands and even no good houses.
 Another example of illusion is shown when people believed that the stranger have the magic power to save them while in reality it is not true.
For example the 1st customer says “why don't we held a meeting with the stranger? He works in magic. Will he not blind their eyes?” but it was not true that the stranger worked in magic but he was insisting on unity.


14.DISILLUSIONMENT



 It is a state of being disappointed with a situation or by someone you thought was good or helpful to you. In the play, disillusionment is shown when people are disappointed by the new government created after independence. It is no longer giving them hope because it has betrayed them. They are suffering in slums but leaders don't care. They are just living in luxurious lives with expensive cars.
 Example disillusionment.
 Stranger: “But what has UHURU brought to us?”
 Crowd: “Nothing!”
 Stranger: “We fought for UHURU but where are the the jobs? Where are the houses?”
 This shows that they are disappointed and have no confidence in the new government.



15.SOCIAL STRATIFICATION/SEGREGATION



After independence, the minority seem to enjoy the national cake (those in the government position). They are seen in expensive cars and live in good houses in the city. On the other hand, the majority are living a poor life in the slums, doing petty jobs in order to survive.
 Also social differences/stratification is seen in places of living, for Example European lives in Kolo, Westlands and Kabete, where rich Africans have built good houses. On the other hands the majority are living in the slums.
 This statement indicates sound stratification and segregation which is taking place even after UHURU.



16.POVERTY



The playwright has portrayed poverty in the play. The people in the slums, the majority who have been fighting for independence are living a poor life. They engage themselves in informal petty activities and their houses are shanty. Njango's house is made of cardboards and rotting tin. She share a floor with her daughter as a bed.
 For example Wanjiro says: “I want to be like other girls in the city who dress like white people. Look at me I have no clothes.”
 This shows that the family is so poor that they can not afford buying good clothes. The poor life make people feel that the government has neglected and hence they are not having any hope.




17.LACK OF SANITATION


The slums are in filthy or dirty condition due to poor sanitation mechanism. Hence the city councils wants to demolish them since it is a shame towards the face of tourists. For example the journal has written an article to describe the filthy concentration. The article reads “The filthy mushrooms inhabited by human beings.”
 The “filthy mushrooms” symbolizes the dirty slums, therefore this shows that in places where poor people lives the issue of sanitation is not considered.




18.AWARENESS



Awareness refers to the state of knowing that something exists and is important. Knowing about the situation and it's positive and negative impacts.
 For example, someone can be aware of the importance of education, effects of tribalism and the significance of unity in the struggle.
 For example the stranger is aware that in any struggle people should have strong determination, unity and courage. For example he says “let us stand together, let us with one voice tell the new government we want our homes, we love them.”
 Asinjo is aware that tribalism is a problem, it can bring problems in development or changes. He knows that tribe is no longer a problem in marriage.
 Njango also shows awareness on problems that face women in town who takes decision like that of Wanjiro of running aways with boys.
 Njango tells Wanjiro “Have you not heard of a women left in the gutter? Women stabbed and left to die in the streets?”



19.GENDER DISCRIMINATION


Girls are facing the problem of not being sent to school. They stay at home doing domestic activities while boys are given the chance to get education.
 Example Wanjiro says “Mother you mock me with your talk of clothes and schools, where is my brother? You sent him to my uncle so that he might attend school. Me, you kept here to work for you.”



20.PROSTITUTION


 This is also seen in the play, when Njango tells Wanjiru that “No child of mine from my own flesh will sell her body, I will break her bones.”
 Prostitution takes place because of poverty and unemployment which makes girls start selling their bodies.






                                    CONFLICT


Reffers to the misunderstanding, clashes, quarrels between people due to some differences in interests or ideas.
 Conflicts can lead to disunity, enmity and underdevelopment. It can also lead to positive changes, such as it can change the nature of treatment that people get in particular place by their government.

 a) Conflicts between the slum dwellers and the city council.


 The slum dwellers and the city council are in conflict because of differences in their interests. The slum dwellers want to stay in the slum while the city council want the slum to be demolished so as to clean the city.

b) Conflicts between the young and the old.


There is a misunderstanding between the young people who after the modern life and people like Njango who are still conservative. The differences in interests leads to misunderstanding, for example Njango dislikes dressing like white people while her daughter does.
 Another conflict occurs when Wanjiro tells her mother that she wants to marry Asinjo, A man from another tribe. This annoys her mother but also Wanjiro is not happy for her mother to prevent her.
 Another conflict is shown between Asinjo and Njango. Asinjo wants to marry Wanjiro but Njango refuses this and chases him away with her wild tongue.”
 Another conflict occurs between Njango and her daughter (Wanjiro) because of oversleeping.
 Njango is not happy by the way her daughter sleeps too much that she is even snoring.
 Njango makes her saying, “Wake up, wake up I tell you I will truly pinch your fat nose and drench your face with cold water, wake up! .”
 Another conflict between Njango and Wanjiro rises over the issue of school, clothes and bad language used by Wanjiro to her mother.
 Wanjiro tells her mother “Mother you mock me with your talk of clothes and school, where is my brother? You sent him to my uncle so that he might attend school, where are the clothes that you buy me? I am ashamed to walk in the streets.”
 Njango reacts by saying “You speak to me like that?”

Conflicts between the police officers and the stranger.


 The police officer is in bad terms with the stranger because he makes people to be involved into violence and civil disobedience. Hence, the police officer arrest him by saying in the name of our new Republic, You are arrested.

Intra-personal conflicts (The conflicts within an individual)
Wanjiro is unhappy with the state of not going to school while her brother has gone. She is also unhappy with the poor life in the slums, where by she does not have good clothes unlike other girls in the city. She wants to be with Asinjo but her mother is preventing her.
 So poverty in the slums makes Wanjiro hate living there and she wants to move from that place.

           

                 MESSAGE




Refers to the lesson that one can learn after reading a certain literary work.
 The following are some of the messages that one can get from the play of this time tomorrow:


 The government should decide properly when it wants to make a decision so as to avoid/prevent creating problems to people. It is very important to involve people when making decision and their views should be considered. For example the city council was supposed to consider the views of the slum dwellers before demolishing their slums.

 Another lesson is that, success always goes to those who struggle. The importance aspects when struggling for success are self determination, unity and patience. Tribalism, ignorance and cowardice are great problems that hinder the attainment of certain goals. So one needs to be very careful when trying to bring some changes in the society.

 Education is an important tool in bringing changes in the society. People in the UHURU market are not ready to write because of ignorance and they don't know why they should write. They have poor believes based on magic power that it can help them while it is not true. All these are due to low level of education.

 Another lesson is that the young should listen to the advice of the elder since they have enough experience and good wisdom. Making decisions based on personal desires can lead someone into problems. For example the decision of Wanjiro to run away/elope with Asinjo was a dangerous one.

 Also we learn that the government is always strong, because it has the machinery to enforce or implement their decisions. Therefore people or citizens cannot easily succeed on fighting it.

 There fore it is good to use the diplomatic ways of facing the government because the use of force can lead to the loss of life and property. Also the government should not make suddenly changes that affects people without involving people.

 One can also learn that rural-urban migration is a big problem in African countries. This lead to the existence of slums and informal sectors like food vendors. For example the Tin Smith says to the journalist “I came to the city many years ago.”
 Rural-urban migration has led to the emergence of people who are not employed.

 


      CHARACTERIZATION







 NJANGO


She is the central character of the play.

 She is a protagonist.

 She is the mother of WANJIRO.

 She is a widow since her husband was killed in the forest during the MAU MAU movement.

 She engages herself in petty (small business)
 Eg. She is selling soup

 Her house is made of cardboards and she shares the floor with the daughter as a bed.

 She is tribalism for example she is against inter tribe marriages.

 She is abandoned by her daughter Wanjiro who decides to elope with Asinjo.

 She warns or advice Wanjiro to be careful with city boys.






 WANJIRO.

 She is the daughter of Njango.

 She is naturally beautiful but not smart due to poverty.

 She has not been sent to school due to her brother.

 She loves ASINJO and wants to marry him but she faces protest from her mother.

 She helps her mother in domestic activities like fetching water sweeping, selling soup.

 She is unhappy with the poor life of living in the slums and wants to go with ASINJO.

 She admires wearing like white people and walks like European lady.

 She finally goes to marry Asinjo.




 STRANGER





 He is an activist who does not live in the slums.

 He conscientious people about their rights and makes people/slum dwellers aware of humiliation, exploitation and demolition of slums.

 He is aware that in order to succeed, there should be strong determination, organised struggles and unity.

 He is courageous since he remained alone when others ran away until is arrested by the police officer. For making people to be involved in violence and civil disobedience.



 SHOE MAKER




 He is one of the slum dwellers.

 He is illiterate and never knows about his age.

 He is married to one wife with five children.

 He was among the freedom fighters in the forest.

 He earns living through repairing of shoes.

 He protests against the new government's discussions to demolish the slums.





 1st CUSTOMER



 He is among the slum dwellers.

 He buys soups at Njango's place.

 He suggests that they should hold the meeting with strangers

 He believes in magic power and Thinks that the stranger can perform his magic. He is a coward.

 He tells the people at the meeting that the police are coming and cautions them that they have batons (guns).




 2nd CUSTOMER





 He is another person who buys soup at Njango's place.

 He also protest/complains about the price of soup to Njango.

 He believes that stranger has magic to save them.

 He is a coward, E.g he tells others to run and he runs away.





 3rd CUSTOMER




 He is also a slum dweller and buys soup at Njango's place.

 He also protests against slum demolition.

 He supports the stranger.

 He encourages people to accept what the stranger is says and stands firm.

 He is also courageous like the stranger.




 INSPECTOR KIONGO




 He works with the city council Health department.

 He reminds people in UHURU market to move away since the slums are going to be demolished in order to implement the the clean city campaign.

 He is not among the slum dwellers.

 He is among the few people who enjoy the National cake, living a good life.

 He helps in forcing the people to move from slums.

 He drives Njango out of her hut.



 ASINJO




 He is a young man from another tribe.

 He loves Wanjiro and wants to marry her.

 He was chased away and insulted and chased away by Njango because she does not want him to marry her duaghter.

 He tells Wanjiro tha he is a Tax driver.

 He convinces Wanjiro to go away with him and ignore her mother claiming she is old and ignorant.




 TINSMITH




 He is also a slim dweller who lives in poor life.

 He is illiterate.

 He is not sure of his age EG. He came to the city but does not remember when exactly.

 He tells the journalist that he has done many jobs including cooking, washing and sweeping.

 He cooked the for white people during the war and after the war.

 He has a terrible experience in his life that involved sleeping in shop-verandas, trenches and in public latrines.



 JOURNALIST:




 He reports different events in the society. EG. Government's decisions to demolish the slums, people's reaction against demolition of slums.

 He is not among the slum dwellers.


 POLICE OFFICER:





 He is among the people in the civil services.

 He arrests the stranger for making people to involve in violence and civil disobedience.
THEMES
 A theme is the main idea or subject in the work of art.
 In “In This Time Tomorrow” by Ngugi wa Thion'go several themes can be analyzed and discussed. These themes includes protest, tribalism, poverty, betrayal, conflict, colonial legacy, building the future, illusion, disillusionment, social differences (stratification), awareness, environment sanitation, ignorances e.t.c.
  

                                         WATER  EROSION


Types of Water Erosion


The four types of water erosion are as follows:
1.   Inter-rill erosion: the movement of soil by rain splash and its transport by this surface flow.
2.   Rill erosion: erosion by concentrated flow in small rivulets.
3.   Gully erosion: erosion by runoff scouring large channels (deeper than 1 foot).
4.   Streambank erosion: erosion by rivers or streams cutting into banks.
The term “sheet erosion” is still frequently used, but omits the concept of rainsplash and conveys the erroneous concept that runoff commonly occurs as a uniform sheet. Since soil-management affects inter-rill and rill erosion, we will focus on these in the following discussion.
The threat of inter-rill and rill erosion is affected by the amount and intensity of rainfall, the erodibility of the soil, the slope length and steepness, cropping and management factors, and erosion control practices. The USDA-NRCS uses book values for erosivity and erodibility and combines this with field observations and farmer information about management practices to estimate the average annual soil loss on a field.
The USDA-NRCS uses the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) to calculate soil loss by erosion as a function of five factors:
A = R × K × LS × C × P
Where:
§  A = annual soil loss (tons/a/yr)
§  R = erosivity of rainfall (function of total rainfall and rainfall intensity)
§  K = erodibility of the soil (function of soil texture, soil organic matter, and soil structure)
§  LS = slope length/steepness
§  C = cropping and management factors (e.g., crops grown, canopy cover, residue cover, surface roughness) 
§  P = erosion control practices (contour tillage and planting, strip-cropping, terracing, subsurface drainage)


Controlling Water Erosion
Soil Management Practices
The two types of water erosion that can be controlled by soil management practices are inter-rill and rill erosion. Engineering structures such as grassed waterways and streambank reinforcement help control other types of water erosion.
Cropping Practices
Cropping and management practices used to control erosion include previous management and cropping, the protection of vegetative canopy to the soil surface, and surface cover and roughness. Generally, the following most important crop management practices will help decrease water erosion:
§  Maintain crop residue cover above 30 percent until crop canopy closure.
§  Alternate summer crops with winter crops and perennial crops. 
§  Use cover crops during periods when the soil would have insufficient residue.
Contour Farming and Strip-Cropping
Additional protection from water erosion is provided by contour farming and contour strip-cropping. Contour farming implies that crops are planted nearly on the contour. The benefit of this practice is greatest on moderate slopes (2 to 6 percent) when crops are planted in tilled soil where ridge height is 2 to 3 inches. However, even in no-till contour farming can reduce erosion if residue cover is marginal and ridge height is 2 inches or more.
Contour strip-cropping involves alternating strips of perennial grass or close-growing crops with strips with low residue cover. The strips should be laid out close to the contour, which is not always possible in rolling landscapes. Strip width is usually between 75 and 120 feet. Soil that erodes from the bare or low-residue strips is deposited in strips with high residue or dense vegetation because runoff velocity is decreased. This practice is most useful if the soil is tilled, or if the soil is left bare during part of the year in no-till. In today’s cropping systems the difference in cover between strips is frequently minimal, which reduces the effectiveness of this practice. If high-residue cover (greater than 30 percent at all times) is maintained in no-till systems, contour farming and contour strip-cropping are usually not necessary to control erosion.
Terraces and Diversions
As slope length and steepness increase, runoff and soil loss also increase. Changing slope steepness with management practices is relatively uncommon in Pennsylvania. Slope length can be changed by installing terraces and diversions that divert runoff.
Terraces are cross-slope channels that control erosion on cropland and are built so that crops can be grown on them. Storage terraces hold water until it can be absorbed by the soil or released to stable outlet channels or through underground outlets. Storage terraces are usually designed to drain completely in 48 hours to avoid waterlogging within the terrace. Gradient terraces are channels designed almost perpendicular to the natural field slope that collect runoff water and carry it to a stable outlet like a waterway.
Diversions are similar to terraces, except that they are permanently vegetated with grass. They are used on steeper slopes where a terrace would be too expensive or difficult to build, maintain, or farm. They can also be used to protect barnyards or farmsteads from runoff.
Other Erosion-control Practices
Other erosion-control practices help maintain water quality but are not immediately relevant to maintain soil productivity on working cropland. The following practices are helpful in reducing sediment and nutrient load in surface waters even though they do not directly improve soil quality:
§  Contour buffer strips: permanently vegetated strips located between larger crop strips on sloping land.
§  Field borders: bands or strips of permanent vegetation at the edge of a field.
§  Filter strips: strips or areas of permanent vegetation used to remove sediment, organic materials, nutrients, pesticides, and other contaminants from runoff.
§  Riparian forest buffers: areas of trees and/or shrubs along streams, lakes, ponds, or wetlands.
§  Vegetative barriers: narrow permanent strips of stiff-stemmed, tall, dense perennial vegetation established in parallel rows perpendicular to the dominant field slope.
§  Grassed waterways: natural or constructed swales where water usually concentrates as it runs off a field.
§  Streambank protection: structures such as fences and stable crossings to keep livestock out of the streams as well as streambank stabilization with rocks, grass, trees, shrubs, riprap, or gabions.


  

S AFRICA

THE APARTHEID POLICY IN SOUTH AFRICA



Apartheid to Democracy in South Africa



What is Apartheid?

Apartheid, an Afrikaans word meaning “apartness,” describes an ideology of racial segregation that served as the basis for white domination of the South African state from 1948 to 1994. Apartheid was the codification of the racial segregation that had been practiced in South Africa from the time of the Cape Colony’s founding by the Dutch East India Company in 1652. Its emergence in 1948 was antithetical to the decolonization process begun in sub-Saharan Africa after World War II. Widely perceived internationally as one of the most abhorrent human rights issues from the 1970s to the 1990s, apartheid conjured up images of white privilege and black marginalization implemented by a police state that strictly enforced black subordination.

1. Informal Settlements
Pictured here is Crossroads, one of the larger informal settlements, or townships, outside of Cape Town, South Africa. Despite the poor conditions of informal settlements, there were significant advantages, such as employment and access to health services, to be gained from living near large towns and cities. The incentive to live in places like Crossroads was immense.

Mandela! : Struggle and Triumph, 2008.

2. Bantu Education

The Bantu educational system was designed to “train and fit” black Africans for their role—laborer, worker, servant—in the evolving apartheid society. This page shows segregated classrooms, which were in existence long before the Bantu Education Act was passed in 1953. The Bantu Education Act was about more than segregating classrooms, it prescribed an inferior education for black African children.

Why Are They Weeping, 1988.

3. Racial Discrimination

With the enactment of apartheid laws in 1948, racial discrimination was institutionalized. Race laws touched every aspect of social life, including a prohibition of marriage between non-whites and whites, the sanctioning of “white-only” jobs, and the separation of public space, such as the bridge seen here on this cover. In 1950, the Population Registration Act required that all South Africans be racially classified into one of three categories: white, black (African), or coloured (of mixed decent). The coloured category included major subgroups of Indians and Asians. Classification into these categories was based on appearance, social acceptance, and family lineage.

Apartheid: The South African Mirror, 2007.

4. Repression and Violence

As unrest spread and became more effective and militarized, state organizations responded with repression and violence. The system of racial segregation was implemented and enforced by a large number of acts and laws, which served to institutionalize racial discrimination and the dominance of white people. While the bulk of this legislation was enacted after the election of the National Party government in 1948, it was preceded by discriminatory legislation enacted under earlier British and Afrikaner governments.

Apartheid: Calibrations of Color, 1991.

5.1 Homelands

The policy of separate development sought to assign every black African to a “homeland” according to their ethnic identity. Ten homelands were created to rid South Africa of its black citizens, opening the way for mass forced removals. In the 1970s, the government granted “independence” to South Africa’s black homelands, which served as an excuse to deny all Africans political rights in South Africa.

Divide and Rule: South Africa’s Bantustands, 1980

5.2 Bantustans

This map illustrates the insidious and capricious nature of the Bantustand policy, which required all black Africans to live in a designated area. The Bantustans were rural, impoverished, under-industrialized, and reliant on subsidies from the South African government. Because insufficient land had been allocated, the Bantustans were densely populated.

Map

6. Colonialism of a Special Type

Up until the 20th century, the western model of colonialism was that of the British Empire: many geographic areas run from the Colonial Office in London. That definition did not apply to South Africa. The phrase “Colonialism of a Special Type” was coined by liberal author Leo Marquard in 1957 to describe a colony which ruled over another people within a single territory.

Apartheid South Africa: Colonialism of a Special Type, 1980s

7. Political Banning

Steve Biko (pictured here), a prominent anti-apartheid activist, was among the more than 1,600 men and women banned by the South African government between 1948 and 1990. Banned persons endured severe restrictions on their movement, political activities, and associations. The banning of political opponents, along with other more severe forms of repression, such as indefinite detention, imprisonment, torture, and political assassination, were weapons the apartheid government used against the liberation movement.

Contact Series, 1973.

8. Poverty and Inequality

Apartheid’s legacy to the democratic South Africa included highly visible poverty and inequality. Under apartheid, to be born black meant to be born into poverty, injustice and inequality.

Apartheid – The Road to Poverty, 1959

The Anti-Apartheid Movement

The anti-apartheid movement began in the 1950s and continued to ebb and flow until the late 1970s and early 1980s when it gained serious momentum and international attention. All facets of South African society —women, students, trade unions, clergy— participated in protests against the apartheid regime. Popular uprisings and protests were met with banning and imprisoning of anti-apartheid leaders. As unrest spread and became more effective and militarized, the state responded with repression and violence. Along with the sanctions placed on South Africa by the international community, the effective organization of the opposition made it increasingly difficult for the government to maintain the regime.

1. The UN Condemns Apartheid

On November 6, 1962, the United Nations formally condemned apartheid in South Africa. Adopted 52 years ago today, UN General Assembly Resolution 1761 implored member nations to halt all diplomatic, military, and economic relations with South Africa, stating that the country’s racial policy “seriously endangers international peace and security.”

Apartheid in the Republic of South Africa: Bantustans, Boycotts, UN action, 1964.

2.1 Divestment Campaigns

A growing international campaign began in the late 1970s and continued into the 80s to push for economic sanctions against and divestment from South Africa. The movement was especially vibrant on college campuses across America, where hundreds and sometimes thousands defied campus police and faced arrest to call for an end to apartheid. This brochure was one of many distributed to call attention to the numerous American corporations with interests in South Africa.

Trade Marks of Apartheid, c. 1980s.

See also Chapter 2: Northwestern, Chicago, and Apartheid

2.2 US Corporations in South Africa
During the apartheid era there were close to 200 U.S. corporations doing business in South Africa, such as Ford Motor Company, IBM, Shell, and Kodak.

US corporations

3. The International Anti-Apartheid Movement

The Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) was a large and influential organization based in London that worked to end apartheid in South Africa. This brochure is an example of the literature distributed internationally to promote their work. The AAM was one of many international groups, including TansAfrica in the United States, which worked to draw attention to the plight of South Africans.

Apartheid: a Threat to Peace, 1976.

4. Women’s Anti Pass Law Campaigns in South Africa

On August 9, 1956, twenty-thousand women, representing all racial backgrounds, came from all over South Africa to march on the Union Buildings, where they stood in silent protest for 30 minutes while petitions with one-hundred thousand signatures were delivered to the Prime Minister’s office. Although the law was not struck down immediately, the gathering was a pivotal moment for women in the struggle for freedom.

The Women’s Freedom March of 1956, 2006.

5. Art and Activism

The untitled (1974) piece by Motsusi and the Soweto Young Musicians by Eric Mbatha (pictured here) was one of many pieces created by artists in South Africa and abroad giving voice to the anti-apartheid movement. Visual art, music, theater, poetry, and literature all played a very important role as outlets for expressing dissenting views. During the apartheid years, works by black artists and artists critical of the regime were banned. Many artists fled the country and continued to work in exile.

Home & Away: A Return to the South, 2010.

6. Student Protest

In 1976, a student-led protest in Soweto (pictured) galvanized the entire country and invigorated the anti-apartheid movement nation-wide. Protests by school children became frequent, including two major urban school boycotts in 1980 and 1983 (pictured), involving black, Indian, and coloured children. In all of these areas, schools were closed and thousands of students, teachers and parents were arrested or went into exile. These closings effected an entire generation of students by cutting short their formal education.

A Rainbow in the Night: The Tumultuous Birth of South Africa, 2009.

7. Black Theology

Black theologians created South African Black theology during the late 1960s and early 1970s as a conscious and theological dimension of the liberation struggle against apartheid. They drew inspiration from African-American theology, biblical hermeneutics and the raw material of their own experiences and suffering, whilst simultaneously creating a new theological paradigm and political orientation to liberate Black South Africans from apartheid and European domination. Inevitably, South African Black theology was a liberation theology aimed at helping to eradicate the existing socio-political order.

Black and Reformed: Apartheid, Liberation and the Calvinist Tradition, 1984.

8. Trade Union Movement

1973 was the beginning of labor activism against apartheid. When Black workers in Durban, South Africa embarked on a wave of strikes in January 1973, the government and employers were caught off guard and were unsuccessful in placating a rapidly growing militant work force. In the end, they gave in to the workers’ demands. This resurgence of union activity would culminate in the formation of massive trade union federations that helped dismantle apartheid by the late 1980s.

Industrial Unrest in South Africa, 1973.

9. Artists United Against Apartheid

Artists United Against Apartheid was a 1985 collaboration founded by activist and performer Steven Van Zandt and record producer Arthur Baker to protest apartheid in South Africa. In addition to recording “Sun City” in 1985, members of Artists United Against Apartheid declared they would refuse all offers to perform at Sun City, a resort located in the Bantustan of Bophuthatswana, one of a number of internationally unrecognized “independent” states created by the South African government to forcibly relocate its black population.

Sun City, 1985

10. Anti-Apartheid Pins and Keychain

In the 1980s, Chicago had a vibrant anti-apartheid community. To show solidarity, Chicago area supporters created and distributed materials to raise awareness of the plight of Black South Africans.

Transition to Democracy

South Africa’s successful struggle for freedom and democracy is one of the most dramatic stories of the late 20th century. The racial tyranny of apartheid ended with a negotiated transition to a non-racial democracy, but not without considerable personal cost to thousands of men, women, and young people who were involved. The lasting popular image of South Africa’s transition from apartheid is of a “miracle” that enabled the country to achieve a peaceful shift to democracy under the leadership of Nelson Mandela.

1. Government of National Unity

President Nelson Mandela and former president F.W. de Klerk (pictured) were leaders of opposing parties during the 1994 election. Once Mandela won the presidency, he invited de Klerk to join him in leading their parties, the African National Congress and the National Party, along with the Inkatha Freedom Party, to come together to form the Government of National Unity.

Images of Change, 1995.

2. Reconstruction and Development

The African National Congress-led Government embarked on a program to promote the reconstruction and development of the country and its institutions. The Reconstruction and Development Program (RDP) aimed at addressing the many social and economic problems facing the country. The RDP recognized that the problems facing the people—lack of housing, a shortage of jobs, inadequate education and health care, a failing economy—were connected. It proposed job creation through public works — the building of houses and provision of services would be done in a way that created employment.

Fragile Freedom: South African Democracy 1994-2004, 2008

3. One Nation, One Country

On Feb. 11, 1990, Nelson Mandela, the leader of the movement to end South African apartheid, was released from prison after 27 years in captivity. Upon his release he addressed a rally in Cape Town. He said, “Today the majority of South Africans, black and white, recognize that apartheid has no future. It has to be ended by our own decisive mass action in order to build peace and security. The mass campaign of defiance and other actions of our organization and people can only culminate in the establishment of democracy.”

One Nation, One Country, 1990.

4. A Time to Build

Nelson Mandela became South Africa’s first black president after more than three centuries of white rule. In his inauguration address he asserts:

“The time for the healing of the wounds has come. The moment to bridge the chasms that divide us has come. The time to build is upon us. We have, at last, achieved our political emancipation. We pledge ourselves to liberate all our people from the continuing bondage of poverty, deprivation, suffering, gender and other discrimination. We succeeded in taking our steps of freedom in conditions of relative peace. We commit ourselves to the construction of a complete, just and lasting peace.”

A Time to Build, 1994.

5. Post-Apartheid South Africa

In today’s South Africa, despite a growing economy, poverty, unemployment, income inequality, life expectancy, land ownership, and educational achievement have worsened since the end of apartheid and the election of the African National Congress. The end of the apartheid system in South Africa left the country with an increasing socio-economic divide along racial lines. Subsequent government policies have sought to correct the imbalances through state intervention.

Is This Really What We Fought For? : White Rule Ends, Black Poverty Goes On, 1997.

6. Sports as a Unifying Force

In 1995, South Africa’s rugby team won the Rugby World Cup. Rugby had previously been regarded as a sport exclusively reserved for white Afrikaners, but Mandela sought to present the Springbok team as a unifying force for South Africa. The victory of the Springboks was a transformative event in South African society, proving that sport can bring a nation together.

Nation Building at Play: Sports as a Tool for Social Integration in Post-apartheid South Africa, 2003.

7. The Freedom Charter

The 1955 Freedom Charter is an important historical document that served as a framework for the anti-apartheid struggle listing the demands and desires of the people of South Africa. The Freedom Charter was the statement of core principles of the South African Congress Alliance, which consisted of the African National Congress and its allies – the South African Indian Congress, the South African Congress of Democrats and the Coloured People’s Congress. It is characterized by its opening demand; “The People Shall Govern!”

Selected Writing on the Freedom Charter, 1955 – 1983, 1985

8. The Constitution

South Africa’s 1996 Constitution is widely recognized as the crowning achievement of the country’s dramatic transition to democracy. The constitution is considered to be one of the most progressive constitutions in the world. Human rights are given clear prominence in the Constitution. They feature in the Preamble with its stated intention of establishing “a society based on democratic values, social justice and fundamental human rights.”

The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 2008.

9. The Free Nelson Mandela Campaign

Nelson Mandela spent 27 years in prison. The South African apartheid government received pressure from all over the world to release him from prison. The global efforts culminated in a 1988 international concert at Wembley Stadium in London, England where it was also broadcasted to 67 countries and to an audience of 600 million. Two years later Nelson Mandela was set free where he received a raucous welcome home.

Welcome Home Nelson Mandela pin, 1990.

Truth and Reconciliation

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was created to investigate gross human rights violations that were perpetrated during the period of the apartheid regime from 1960 to 1994, including abductions, killings, torture. Its mandate covered both violation by both the state and the liberation movements and allowed the commission to hold special hearings focused on specific sectors, institutions, and individuals. The TRC recorded and made public the details of a very painful past. The process of publicly acknowledging and confronting these details was a very necessary part of the process of healing the historic wounds. Controversially the TRC was empowered to grant amnesty to perpetrators who confessed their crimes truthfully and completely to the commission.

1. Nation Building

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission helped ease South Africa into the reconstruction and nation-building process and facilitated a smooth transition from apartheid rule to democracy. The first democratic elections, which were held peacefully and successfully in 1994, also made an important contribution to social cohesion and building a new national identity.

Ending Autocracy, Enabling Democracy: The Tribulations of Southern Africa, 1960-2000, 2002.

2. National Healing

When South Africa had its first all-race democratic election in April 1994, it took a step toward joining the community of democratic nations of the world. It also took the courageous and virtually unique step to examine its own violent past, reveal its ugly truths and move forward in a spirit of healing and reconciliation. The leaders of the new South Africa realized there would be no future for the country under majority rule without all its citizens having full knowledge of their violent past.

Political Forgiveness: Lessons from South Africa, 2004.

3. Remembering the Victims of Human Rights Abuses

One goal of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission was to facilitate the “rehabilitation and the restoration of the human and civil dignity of victims of violations of human rights.” Through the public hearings undertaken by the Human Rights Violations Committee and the publishing of victims’ experiences, the Commission intended to restore voice and dignity to those previously marginalized. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Volume 7, is a comprehensive listing of victims and the injustices suffered by each individual.

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Volume 7, 2002.

4. Public Hearings

An important feature of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was its openness and transparency. The public hearings held by the TRC ensured that South Africans were made aware of the atrocities that had been committed during the apartheid years. Pictured is one such public hearing.

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Volume 1, 2002.

5. Reparation

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission made detailed recommendations for a reparations program including financial, symbolic and community reparations. The Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee was mandated to identify victims and seek input regarding what types of reparations should be adopted and implemented. The commission proposed that each victim or family should receive approximately $3,500 USD each year for six years.

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Volume 6, 2002.

6. National Identity and Democracy

“Rainbow Nation” is a term coined by Archbishop Desmond Tutu to describe post-apartheid South Africa. The phrase was elaborated upon by President Nelson Mandela in his first month of office, when he proclaimed: “Each of us is as intimately attached to the soil of this beautiful country as are the famous jacaranda trees of Pretoria and the mimosa trees of the bushveld – a rainbow nation at peace with itself and the world.” The term was intended to encapsulate the unity of multi-culturalism and the coming-together of people of many different nations, in a country once identified with the strict division of white and black.

Whiteness Just Isn’t What it used to be: White Identity in a Changing South Africa, 2001.

7. Race Relations

At the point of entering a democratic era, South Africa is dismantling its legally structured system of inequality. However, the societal structures that gave rise to, and nurtured a system of white privilege are tenacious and enduring.

We look at White people and we think Oh! My God! : The true story of two racist White men and the Apartheid Museum, 2011.

8. The Apartheid Museum

The Apartheid Museum, close to downtown Johannesburg, has a permanent exhibit covering the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The Apartheid Museum Brochure.

9. Zapiro

South Africans have a wonderful sense of humor. Even at the worst of times, they find a way to laugh at what is going on around them. Zapiro, aka Johnathan Shapiro, is South Africa’s leading political cartoonist. His cartoons are widely published in some of the most important South African newspapers.

Criticism of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s work and final report came from many quarters. This comic strip by Zapiro, a notable South African political cartoonist, demonstrates the gulf between the people’s expectations for reconciliation and reality.

Political cartoon by Zapiro, 1997.

Heroes of the Struggle

There were many people, groups, and organizations that fought against and brought down the South African apartheid regime. These anti-apartheid heroes could be found in all sectors of society; the youths, women groups, labor unions, and civic groups, all had an important role to play in eradicating the evils of apartheid. The abolition of apartheid in South Africa would not have come about by Nelson Mandela’s work alone, without the initiative of the thousands of unsung heroes.

1. Lilian Ngoyi

“In the name of the women of South Africa we say to you that we are opposed to the pass system. We shall not rest until we have won for our children their freedom, justice and security.”

With these words, Lilian Ngoyi led twenty thousand women in an anti-pass protest to the Union Buildings. The protest took place on August 9, 1956, now commemorated by National Women’s Day.

Lilian Ngoyi, 1996.

2. Ruth First

Ruth First was an anti-apartheid activist, investigative journalist, and scholar. First worked her entire life to end apartheid in South Africa. Writing in 1969, she explained how her life was dedicated “to the liberation of Africa for I count myself an African, and there is no cause I hold dearer.”

Ruth First, 2012.

3. Oliver Tambo

Oliver Tambo (pictured) was a relentless spokesperson for the banned African National Congress in Europe. Tambo was sent overseas to mobilize resistance against apartheid. He settled in London where he and his family remained until 1990.

To Sweden from ANC, 1987.

4. Winnie Mandela

Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the former wife of the late Nelson Mandela is a national figure in her own right. While her husband was imprisoned she became the voice of the anti-apartheid movement. As antigovernment violence raged in the black townships, she appeared at rallies and funerals as a stand-in for her jailed husband, gaining the nickname of “Mother of the Nation.”

Winnie Mandela: L’ame noire de l’Afrique du Sud, 2007.

5. Miriam Makeba

Miriam Makeba, nicknamed Mama Africa, was a Grammy Award-winning South African singer and anti-apartheid activist. In the 1960s, she was the first artist from Africa to popularize African music around the world. Makeba campaigned vigorously against the South African apartheid regime. The South African government responded by revoking her passport in 1960 and her citizenship and right of return in 1963. As the apartheid system crumbled she returned home for the first time in 1990.

Darkroom: Photography and New Media in South Africa since 1950, 2009.

6. Living in Exile

Thousands of South African activists were forced into exile in the depths of the apartheid years. Some anti-apartheid leaders went into exile in Europe, places like England and Sweden, while others stayed in South Africa and pursued the fight domestically.

Prodigal Daughters: Stories of South African Women in Exile, 2012.

7. South Africa Nobel Peace Prize Laureates

Albert Luthuli was awarded the 1960 Nobel Peace Prize for his role in the non-violent struggle against apartheid. Like Albert Luthuli, Desmond Tutu was honored in 1984 with the Peace Prize for his opposition to South Africa’s brutal apartheid regime. And, in 1993 Nelson Mandela and F. W. de Klerk shared the Nobel Peace Prize for leading South Africa through a successful democratic transition.

Strengths & Convictions: The Life and Times of the South African Nobel Peace Prize Laureates, 2009.

8. From Mandela to Zuma

Representing 20 years of democracy from Mandela’s era to today, this holographic poster transitinos between a photo of Nelson Mandela and current president Jacob Zuma. (Move side to side to see the transition effect.)

Poster, 2011.

9. Mandela: Global and Cultural Icon

Over the last 20 plus years, Nelson Mandela has transformed into a global and cultural icon. Mandela’s likeness can be found in all types of memorabilia. Here, we have Nelson Mandela’s likeness on a wall clock, on a pin, on a T-shirt, and beautifully crafted wooden figurines. The figurines are stylized in Nelson Mandela’s hugely popular dress shirts, the ‘Madiba’ shirts.

Wall clock, pin, t-shirt, wooden figurines

10. Oliver Tambo

Along with Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo formed the first black law firm in South Africa. Oliver Tambo and Nelson Mandela also together co-founded the congress’s youth league in 1944. After his death, the country’s busiest airport was renamed in his honor. Here, we have a commemorative plate with Oliver Tambo’s likeness.

Commemorative plate

South Africa Today: The Healing Power of Sport

South Africa has come a long way from being an international pariah state and today is a well respected country with one of the most progressive constitutions in the world. Nelson Mandela was able to lead his country through a relatively peaceful transition. He extolled the need for forgiveness and reconciliation and his legacy will be one of friendship and brotherhood. Mandela used his love of sports to reintroduce the world to his country.

1. 2010 Soccer World Cup
South Africa was the first African nation to host the hugely popular and global World Cup in 2010. (1) The iconic symbol of the 2010 World Cup was the vuvuzela, a plastic horn traditionally used at local soccer events. (2) The Makaraba, also made its international debut at the 2010 World Cup. The declarative helmet is a hand-cut and hand-painted hard hat worn by sports fans. The (3) Soccer player, (4) Soccer ball, (5) and replica of the World Cup trophy are just a few of the World Cup memorabilia found in South Africa.

Vuvuzela, Makaraba, Soccer player, Soccer ball, Replica of the World Cup trophy

2. Cape Town 2004 Olympic Bid

South Africa and the city of Cape Town submitted an unsuccessful bid to host the 2004 Olympics. The winning of the bid would have been significant because South Africa would have been the first African country to host the Olympic games. South Africa was out of Olympic competition from 1960 through 1988 because of the system of apartheid.

South Africa’s Commitment to Cape Town’s Bid.

3. South African Rugby

Rugby is considered the national sport by most white South Africans. South Africa is very proud of their national Rugby Team. During the apartheid years the national team encountered a great deal of protest and boycotts as they toured Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. Today, there has been a concerted effort to bring in more black South Africans into the game. Bryan Habana (pictured) has helped change the perception and complexion of a predominantly all white sport.

SA Rugby Annual 2013, 2012.

4. Rugby World Cup Champions

In 2007, South Africa defeated England by 15-6 to win their second championship. The victory marked the Springboks’ return to international prominence (pictured, is the 2007 championship team). But, the bigger story was when South Africa defeated a heavily favored New Zealand team 15-12 in South Africa in 1995 as newly democratically elected president Nelson Mandela cheered the team to victory. This match inspired the major motion picture Invictus.

Champions of the World, 2007.

5. South African Cricket

As with rugby and soccer, South Africans love cricket. South African international cricket was suspended 1970 to 1991 due to the apartheid government policies. Since its return in 1991, the game has enjoyed a resurgence in the country.

Mutual & Federal SA Cricket Annual 2004, 2004.

6. Gautrain

The Gautrain was built prior to the 2010 World Cup to improve the rapid transit infrastructure in Gauteng Province which is considered to be the economic regional hub of southern Africa. The train connects the O. R. Tambo airport to Johannesburg’s northern suburbs and to Pretoria (pictured).

Guatrain map and transit card

7. HIV/AIDS Awareness

HIV/AIDS is the number one health concern in South Africa today. South Africa is believed to have more people with HIV/AIDS than any other country in the world. An estimated 5.6 million people were living with HIV and AIDS in South Africa in 2011 (UNAIDS 2012). (1) This handmade Ndebele doll is used to promote and assist with raising funds for AIDS awareness and health care. (2) There are several nonprofit organizations, such as Wola Nani, that assist people with HIV and AIDS to earn an income through craft works. The sale of this papier mâché bowl, made from the labels of pilchard cans, and similar crafts help people live a dignified life. (3) This HIV awareness poster is part of a comprehensive campaign from the University of Cape Town. It calls attention to the fact that HIV does not discriminate.

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