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'''The Signifnace of the Sowetu Uprisings''':
'''The Signifnace of the Sowetu Uprisings''':


The Sowetu Uprisings were significant because it is an event that signified the end of apartheid. Before the riots blacks did not entirely resist the regime, due to fear. Howevere, the riots awakened blacks and taught them how to resist and also made them realise that they cand resist apartheid. White citizens also started to withdraw their support from the government. Parents of the black students in Sowetu started to lead by their children's example and started to organize themselves into anti- apartheid movements. These movements combined with international pressure and economic sanctions eventually led to the succesful ending of apartheid 1994 when South African held its first democratic elections.  
The Sowetu Uprisings were significant because it is an event that signified the end of apartheid. Before the riots blacks did not entirely resist the regime, due to fear. However, the riots awakened blacks and taught them how to resist and also made them realise that they can indeed resist apartheid. White citizens also started to withdraw their support from the government. Parents of the black students in Soweto started to lead by their children's example and started to organize themselves into anti- apartheid movements. These movements combined with international pressure and economic sanctions eventually led to the succesful ending of apartheid 1994 when South African held its first democratic elections.  
June 16th, 1976 will always be remebered and the courage of so many young South Africans will be taught and for many years to come. The democratic South African government has honored these students by declaring June 16th South African Youth Day.
June 16th, 1976 will always be remebered and the courage of so many young South Africans will be taught for many years to come. The democratic South African government has honored these students by declaring June 16th South African Youth Day.





Latest revision as of 03:45, 12 May 2006

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The Aftermath:

South Africans including white South Africans were outraged by the reaction of the government to the riots. The apartheid governmnet denied ever having fired the first shots and even to this day the riots are portrayed differently within the white and black communities. In the white communities there are countless pictures that depicts the black students as being the violent ones by bombarding the police with stones and glass bottles. On the other hand, in the black community there are pictures showing white policemen shooting at defenseless school children. Although both communities have different interpretations of the riots, it does not remove the fact that hundreds of children died that day. Almost immediately after the riots came to an end, over 300 white students from universities in Johannesburg marched to show their anger towards theapartheid government for killing school children. The picture of Hector Pieterson's dead body which was captured by journalsists, outraged millions and brought down international condemnation on the apartheid government. Images of the riots spread all over the world and millions of people were shocked. There were many protests held outside of South Africa, for example, in the United Kingdom, people protested outside the office of the South African Embassy. Economic sanctions were placed on the apartheid government by the United Nations, however, it would take eighteen years before apartheid was succesfully eliminated within South Africa.



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The Signifnace of the Sowetu Uprisings:

The Sowetu Uprisings were significant because it is an event that signified the end of apartheid. Before the riots blacks did not entirely resist the regime, due to fear. However, the riots awakened blacks and taught them how to resist and also made them realise that they can indeed resist apartheid. White citizens also started to withdraw their support from the government. Parents of the black students in Soweto started to lead by their children's example and started to organize themselves into anti- apartheid movements. These movements combined with international pressure and economic sanctions eventually led to the succesful ending of apartheid 1994 when South African held its first democratic elections. June 16th, 1976 will always be remebered and the courage of so many young South Africans will be taught for many years to come. The democratic South African government has honored these students by declaring June 16th South African Youth Day.


'UNITE! MOBILISE! FIGHT ON! BETWEEN THE ANVIL OF UNITED MASS ACTION AND THE HAMMER OF THE ARMED STRUGGLE WE SHALL CRUSH APARTHEID!'

This message was Mandela's call after the Soweto uprising of 1976. It was published by the ANC on 10 June 1980, with an introduction by O R Tambo, President of the ANC at the time.

Oliver Tambo: President, ANC MANDELA'S CALL

RACISTS RULE BY THE GUN!

The gun has played an important part in our history. The resistance of the black man to white colonial intrusion was crushed by the gun. Our struggle to liberate ourselves from white domination is held in check by force of arms. From con- quest to the present the story is the same. Successive white regimes have repeatedly massacred unarmed defenceless blacks. And wherever and whenever they have pulled out their guns the ferocity of their fire has been trained on the African people.

Apartheid is the embodiment of the racialism, repression and inhumanity of all previous white supremacist regimes. To see the real face of apartheid we must look beneath the veil of constitutional formulas, deceptive phrases and playing with words.

The rattle of gunfire and the rumbling of Hippo armoured vehicles since June 1976 have once again torn aside that veil. Spread across the face of our country, in black townships, the racist army and police have been pouring a hail of bullets killing and maiming hundreds of black men, women and children. The toll of the dead and injured already surpasses that of all past massacres carried out by this regime.

Apartheid is the rule of the gun and the hangman. The Hippo, the FN rifle and the gallows are its true symbols. These remain the easiest resort, the ever ready solution of the race-mad rulers of South Africa.

VAGUE PROMISES, GREATER REPRESSION . . .

In the midst of the present crisis, while our people count the dead and nurse the injured, they ask themselves: what lies ahead?

From our rulers we can expect nothing. They are the ones who give orders to the soldier crouching over his rifle: theirs is the spirit that moves the finger that caresses the trigger.

Vague promises, tinkerings with the machinery of apartheid, constitution juggling, massive arrests and detentions side by side with renewed overtures aimed at weakening and forestalling the unity of us blacks and dividing the forces of change - these are the fixed paths along which they will move. For they are neither capable nor willing to heed the verdict of the masses of our people.

THE VERDICT OF JUNE 16!

That verdict is loud and clear: apartheid has failed. Our people remain unequivocal in its rejection. The young and the old, parent and child, all reject it. At the forefront of this 1976/77 wave of unrest were our students and youth. They come from the universities, high schools and even primary schools. They are a generation whose whole education has been under the diabolical design of the racists to poison the minds and brainwash our children into docile subjects of apartheid rule. But after more than twenty years of Bantu Education the circle is closed and nothing demonstrates the utter bankruptcy of apartheid as the revolt of our youth.

The evils, the cruelty and the inhumanity of apartheid have been there from its inception. And all blacks - Africans, Coloureds and Indians - have opposed it all along the line. What is now unmistakable, what the current wave of unrest has sharply highlighted, is this: that despite all the window-dressing and smooth talk, apartheid has become intolerable.

This awareness reaches over and beyond the particulars of our enslavement. The measure of this truth is the recognition by our people that under apartheid our lives, individually and collectively, count for nothing.

UNITE !

We face an enemy that is deep rooted, an enemy entrenched and determined not to yield. Our march to freedom is long and difficult. But both within and beyond our borders the prospects of victory grow bright.

The first condition for victory is black unity. Every effort to divide the blacks, to woo and pit one black group against another, must be vigorously repulsed. Our people - African, Coloured, Indian and democratic whites - must be united into a single massive and solid wall of resistance, of united mass action.

Our struggle is growing sharper. This is not the time for the luxury of division and disunity. At all levels and in every walk of life we must close ranks. Within the ranks of the people differences must be submerged to the achievement of a single goal - the complete overthrow of apartheid and racist domination.

VICTORY IS CERTAIN !

The revulsion of the world against apartheid is growing and the frontiers of white supremacy are shrinking. Mozambique and Angola are free and the war of liberation gathers force in Namibia and Zimbabwe. The soil of our country is destined to be the scene of the fiercest fight and the sharpest battles to rid our continent of the last vestiges of white minority rule.

The world is on our side. The OAU, the UN and the anti-apartheid movement continue to put pressure on the racist rulers of our country. Every effort to isolate South Africa adds strength to our struggle.

At all levels of our struggle, within and outside the country, much has been achieved and much remains to be done. But victor~ is certain!

Source: http://www.anc.org.za

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INTERNATIONAL RESPONSES TO APARTHEID







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