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August 1, 2025
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Apartheid timeline
Category:
Andere
Wurde aktualisiert:
14 Feb 2023
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147
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Created by
rodrigo
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Ereignisse
-End of WWII -After WW2, South Africa experience economic problems -Cost of living and shortage of houses -Many Africans had moved to cities during war and started working in factories and joining trade unions -Many white people were afraid of this shift in power
In late 1946, Prime Minister Jan Smuts appointed the Fagan Commission to investigate the best way to deal with the problem of African urbanization: At the same time, the National Party, led by Dr. D.F. Malan, appointed its own commission, the Sauer Commission.
Recommendations of the Fagan report, February 1948: -Total segregation would never work -Industry and commerce needed a permanent and settled black urban population -It was impossible to return all the existing townspeople to the reserves, which were overcrowed -Migrant labour should be discouraged -African families should be discouraged to settle in locations under strict control
Recommendation of the Sauer Report, 1948: Apartheid or the separate development of the races was the only way forward. -The reserves were where Africans belonged. -The flood of Africans into the cities was a dangerous development -Urban Africans must continue to be treated as visitors without political rights -Their numbers must be strictly controlled -The migrant labor system must continue -Black locations must be kept clearly separate from white towns
THE IMPLEMENTATION OF APARTHEID Once the National Party was in power, it began to pass a wide range of apartheid laws. These laws aimed to ensure racial separation in all aspects of social life and to control the movement and economic activity of blacks.
PROHIBITION OF MIXED MARRIAGES ACT, NO 55 OF 1949
IMMORALITY AMENDMENT ACT, NO 21 OF 1950 POPULATION REGISTRATION ACT, NO 30 OF 1950 GROUP AREAS ACT, NO 41 OF 1950 SUPPRESSION OF COMMUNISM ACT, NO 44 OF 1950
PREVENTION OF ILLEGAL SQUATTING ACT, NO 47 OF 1953 BANTU EDUCATION ACT, NO 47 OF 1953 RESERVATION OF SEPARATE AMENITIES ACT, NO 49 OF 1953
The Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act, No 55 of 1949 This law prohibited marriage between whites and people of other races.
The Immorality Amendment Act, No 21 of 1950 Sexual relations between black and white South Africans were forbidden. To enforce this Act, police raided houses and broke into bedrooms to photograph couples breaking the law. The Apartheid Museum has recorded the way in which the police harassed one particular couple, Professor Blacking and Dr Desai.
The Population Registration Act, No 30 of 1950 This law classified every South African according to their particular racial group. This would determine where they were allowed to live and what work they could do. This law had a terrible effect on people whose racial identity was not clear. For example, families could suddenly find themselves divided. Parents who were classified as African might be told that their children had been classified as coloured. Their children had to go and live in a so-cal
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