Tuesday, 8 March 2016

Racism and apartheid in South Africa

Written by: Aleksandra Bodnar, Natalia Potoczna, Mai Salomonsen & Helle Kristensen

RACISM AND APARTHEID IN SOUTH AFRICA
Apartheid and racism in South Africa is a consequence of Dutch colonization in the fifteenth century. People who have been resettled into South Africa, mostly stayed there and started a new life. As we can imagine, European people are white-skinned, while most residents of Africans are dark-skinned. Racism in that part of the world is easy to notice when we are looking for work. Edi Pyrek, a writer and traveller, who was in South Africa in 2006, says that "A white man gets work at the very end. First, it is given to a Negro, Negress and then to a Hindus and next to a white woman and white man. A white-skinned man, who set up and ran his own company for several years, has to give at least a half of it to a dark-skinned man so that he will not have majority shares."
According to Employment Equity Act, the main task of affirmative
action was equality in a workplace and abolition of unjust discrimination, but through the ages we could notice that the discrimination didn't relate to the black-skinned, but to white-skinned people. Fryderyk Willem de Klerk, the ex-president of South Africa and laureate of the Nobel Peace Prize said that white men of South Africa feel like second-class citizens in their own country because of the way the affirmative action is introduced. Discrimination against the white-skinned was also easy to see at universities, because a lot of them resigned from studying in African schools. There were organized many actions which were supposed to show the situation in the country. For example students of University in Pretoria tried to raise people’s awareness of racism, so they organized an action which showed what exactly affirmative action looked like.
Since the collapse of apartheid, white people have been running away from South Africa, and also worrying about their lives. Why? For example in Zimbabwe, many farmers were not only dispossessed of their landed estates, but also killed. As a result, many farmlands aren't cultivated, because Africans don't worry about the consequences of not having anything to eat. The most drastic type of racism, apart from killing farmers by the black-skinned, was raping their wives. The crime was committed mostly by AIDS patients.

Dariusz Ratajczak, a Polish historian, describes the situation in South Africa as "a fierce battle whose aim is to break the backbone of all people who have a white color of skin."
The whole article about racism in South Africa has been based on an article published in 2007.


SEGREGATION IN USA
From 1896 began most of the southern states to split everything up between human races, that are also called segregation. Segregation of white and colored in public
buildings, trains, schools and buses. There were Introduced laws that forbade contact between white and colored, and the white also made rules that prevented African- Americans to have voice or vote in elections and referendums.

In the first half of the 20th century white and colored south citizens got born in separate hospitals, educated in separate schools, married in separate churches, and so on. Even every single bus, school, café, hospital, water fountain and prison was either for white or for colored, but never for both.

After a marriage between the Afro-American Jack Johnson and Lucille Cameron (a white woman) proposed the representative from Georgia, Seaborn Roddenberry, in 1911 a supplement to the American fundamental law, which should forbid marriage between Negros or colored and white forever.
Roddenberry’s proposal was not adopted, but already in 1913 had 42 out of 48 states enforced similar laws.
In 1954 fought NAACP (The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) for justice between white and colored. Supreme Court reviewed segregation in public schools, as a breach on the fundamental law. Judge Earl Warren forbade further segregation in public buildings.
On December 1, 1955 Rosa Parks (black American woman) got arrested In Alabama for not giving off her bus seat to a white man.
After that, Martin Luther King, a local preacher, took lead in a boycott off the bus company. The bus company changed their rules after some time with the boycott.

in 1962 followed 3000 soldiers from federal state with common government , James Meredith, the first African-American student at the University of Mississippi , into the university building.
As late as 1963 only 9% of the Confederate schools abolished segregation.
On April 29, 1992 gets an American taxi driver beaten by Los Angeles Police Department officers. A local witness, George Holliday, videotaped much of it from his balcony, and sent the footage to the police, but they just ignored him, then he sent it to local a news station. The footage shows four officers surrounding King, several of them striking him repeatedly, while other officers stood by. Four officers were charged with assault with a deadly weapon and use of excessive force.

Then after so much segregation in the US, they end up in 2009 getting their first Afro-American president, Barack Obama. USA’s 44th president through time. When it in 2012 again was time for a new presidential election Barack Obama decided to run for re-election. He ended up winning again and he still is president now in USA, until November, when there again is presidential election, and Obama cannot run for president again since he already has been president for two terms.



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