-
American Committee on Africa
An American organization established in 1953, dedicated to
supporting liberation movements in Africa and informing the American
public about African affairs.
-
Africa Fund
Organization affiliated with the American Committee on Africa that
engaged in public education on African issues.
-
African National Congress (ANC)
Founded in 1912 as the South African Native National
Congress (SANNC), the ANC initially worked within the law to eliminate
racial oppression. The ANC was banned in 1960 by the Afrikaner
government, but continued to function in exile and underground inside
South Africa. In 1961, the previously non-violent ANC adopted a policy
of armed resistance, establishing Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the
Nation) or MK. F. W. de Klerk removed the ban on the ANC in 1990 and ANC
leaders engaged in negotiations with white leaders which led to the
1994 democratic elections. The ANC is the dominant political party in
South Africa, having won more than two-thirds of the vote in the 2004
national elections.
-
African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL)
Founded in 1944 to represent the radical views of young members of the
African National Congress who favored mass protests. Key members of the
ANCYL included Anton Lembede, Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, and Oliver
Tambo.
-
African nationalism
The belief in and promotion of an African cultural
identity and African political and economic power.
-
Africanization
Due to economic fluctuations in the price of gold, mine owners sought to
keep profits high by replacing expensive white workers with black
laborers. The changes frustrated working class whites, who petitioned
for greater job security and further segregation. By the 1930s, much of
the labor in mines, industry, and domestic work was preformed by
blacks.
-
Afrikaans
A language derived from Dutch that developed among the white, Khoisan,
and slave populations of the Cape Colony. Afrikaans was recognized as an
official language in 1925 and was further developed with the rise of
Afrikaner nationalism and apartheid.
-
Afrikaner
Dutch term for “native of Africa”; refers to whites who speak the
Afrikaans language.
-
Afrikaner Broederbond
A secret society established in 1919 that promoted
Afrikaner ethnic nationalism in South African society. Many Afrikaner
politicians (including every prime minister during apartheid), military
personnel, churchmen, academics, journalists, and other professionals
were Broederbond members. It is still in existence today.
-
Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB)
Afrikaner Resistance Movement, an extra-parliamentary group of
ultra-conservative Afrikaners formed in the 1970s. It advocated the
creation of an independent Afrikaner state.
-
AIDS Consortium
Established in 1992 by Justice Edwin Cameron, the consortium is a
network of more than 300 organizations and individuals who work to
provide access to information about HIV/AIDS and to eliminate the stigma
of HIV/AIDS.
-
Amandla
Nguni word meaning “power.” When shouted, it is answered by
“ngawethu,”or “It is ours.” Together, the words mean “power to the
people.” It is also the name of an ANC musical group that raised
international awareness of apartheid’s atrocities.
-
Amnesty
A complete and full pardon, removing all legal memory of an offense.
-
ANC Women’s League
he Bantu Women’s League (BWL), a forerunner of the ANC Women’s League,
was formed in 1918 in response to a government plan to reintroduce pass
laws for women. It fought for the rights of black women and participated
in civil disobedience campaigns. In 1943, the ANC accepted women into
its membership and in 1948, the ANC Women’s League was formed.
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Anti-apartheid movement
A general name for the international movement to oppose
white minority rule in South Africa. In some countries, such as the
United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, and West
Germany, there were national organizations by this name. In the United
States, the anti-apartheid movement comprised many national and local
organizations.
-
Apartheid
Literally “apartness” in Afrikaans. A policy of racial
segregation introduced by the National Party after its electoral victory
in 1948. It created a highly stratified society in which whites
dominated politically, economically, and socially at the expense of
blacks. See also Petty apartheid and Grand apartheid.
-
Australopithecines (Australopithecus)
A group of early hominids closely related to humans that lived 4-2
million years ago. Remains of Australopithecus Africanus have been found
only in southern Africa.
-
Azanian People’s Organization (AZAPO)
A Black Consciousness organization established in 1978
focused on creating a socialist state. Azania is used as an African name
for South Africa. AZAPO never gained a large membership.
-
Baas
“Boss” in Afrikaans.
-
Bantu
A term used to describe a family of languages spoken mainly
in southern and eastern Africa. It comes from the stem for the
noun–ntu (person) (pl. abantu, meaning people). During apartheid, the
term “Bantu” was used as a derogatory term for black Africans.
-
Bantu Education
Educational system for Africans designed to fit them for their role in
apartheid society. Designed by H.F. Verwoerd and made law with the
Bantu Education Act of 1953, Bantu Education placed the apartheid
government in control of African education. Financing for Bantu
Education was removed from the general government budget and linked
instead directly to the taxes paid by Africans, which resulted in far
less money spent on educating black children than white children.
Though this system was put in place to isolate Africans and keep them
from “subversive” ideas, indignation towards the inferior educations
they received led to large-scale resistance to Bantu Education, the most
notable example being the Soweto Revolt.
-
Bantustan
Ethnically defined areas for Africans created on the basis of the
“Native Reserves” (Land Act, 1913). Constituted only 13% of South
African territory. Bantustans were to be given self-government and later
independence in order to deny Africans citizenship rights in “white
South Africa.” 3.5 million Africans were forcibly removed to Bantustans.
Widespread poverty in these areas helped employers secure a supply of
cheap black labor. Today, all South Africans have political rights in a
unified country, and Bantustans no longer exist.
-
Barolong
An important Tswana clan in the north-west of South Africa, including
Mafikeng.
-
Black consciousness
Ideology that sought to liberate black people (Africans,
Coloureds, and Indians) psychologically through the realization of black
self-worth and positive action, including economic self-reliance and
rejection of dominant “white” values.
-
Black Sash
Founded in 1955, this organization of white women began by promoting
respect for the constitution and protesting the loss of voting rights
for Coloureds. Members would stand silently in public places wearing a
black sash as a symbol of mourning for the government’s treatment of the
constitution. The Black Sash established Advice Offices in urban
centers to assist Africans with many issues, particularly the pass laws.
Black Sash members also became involved in protesting forced removals,
monitoring pass courts, and being a presence at political funerals in
the 1980s.
-
Boipatong Massacre
In June 1992, armed members of the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) living at
Kwa Madala hostel attacked the residents of Boipatong, an informal
settlement south of Johannesburg, killing about 45 people.
-
British justice
A set of beliefs that focus on human rights, legal representation, and
the right to a fair trial.
-
Calvinism
A form of Protestant Christianity named after John Calvin.
It is known for the Doctrine of Predestination and a belief in total
dependence on God. Informed the theology and practice of the Dutch
Reformed Church in South Africa, which provided theological
justification for apartheid.
-
Calvinist
A follower of Calvinism.
-
Chiefdom
The political organization of a community or groups of communities, all
of whom recognize one person, called a chief, as the senior political
authority of their group.
-
Civil Cooperation Bureau (CCB)
A secret South African Defense Force unit created in 1986 with the
purpose of disrupting anti-apartheid activities in South Africa and
abroad by assassinating oppositional leaders and destroying ANC
facilities.
-
Civil disobedience
Non-violent actions to refuse to obey unjust laws in an
effort to change government policy or legislation without resorting to
violence.
-
Color bar
Limitations on job availability and restrictions on which jobs (and what
salary) one could work due to one’s race.
-
Coloured
Generally refers to people of mixed race. The term gained primacy in the
19th century and was an official racial classification under apartheid.
This category is extremely fluid and not clearly defined, encompassing
diverse peoples including Khoikhoi, free blacks, and people of mixed
descent. In the 1990s, Coloureds made up about 8% of the South African
population, the largest number residing in the Western Cape.
-
Communism
A political philosophy based on communal ownership of property. In the
Communist Manifesto (1848), Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels argued that
the workers of the world would overthrow the capitalist system to begin
the process of building a communist state.
-
Conservatism
Political theory favoring existing laws and traditional institutions,
resistant to sudden change and governmental activism.
-
Conservative
Favors existing laws and traditional institutions, is resistant to
sudden change and governmental activism.
-
Conservative Party
An extreme right-wing party founded in 1982 in a split from the National
Party. It boycotted the 1994 elections.
-
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
Ratified in 1996, the permanent constitution provided the framework for a
non-racial democracy.
-
Constitutional Assembly (CA)
A 490-member democratically elected body formed in 1994 to
write a new constitution. The Constitutional Assembly was bound by the
Constitutional Principles agreed upon by the Multi-Party Negotiation
Forum.
-
Constitutional Principles
The 34 principles included in the interim constitution adopted in 1993
by the Multi-Party Negotiation Forum. The 34 principles were meant to
provide an outline for the final constitution to be drawn by the
Constitutional Assembly. The principles required South Africa to be a
multi-party democracy with a Bill of Rights.
-
Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA)
Negotiating forum established by most political organizations in 1991 to
carry out the transition from apartheid to democracy in South Africa. A
second CODESA met in May of 1992. It was succeeded by the Negotiating
Forum.
-
Council of Unions of South Africa
A coalition of unions formed in 1980 along Black Consciousness
principles. It joined with the Azanian Confederation of Trade Unions to
form the National Council of Trade Unions in 1986.
-
Customary law
Legal system for Africans instituted by British colonial rulers. It
purported to be a codification of African jurisprudence and allowed the
British to institutionalize segregation and rule by proxy through local
chiefs and headmen.
-
Drum magazine
Popular black South African monthly magazine started in the 1950s,
devoted to black popular urban culture, editorials and commentary on
apartheid.
-
Dutch East India Company
Established in 1602 in the Netherlands to conduct trade in
Asia. It established an outpost in South Africa in 1652 at the Cape of
Good Hope that later grew into a European colony.
-
Federation of South African Trade Unions
A national, non-racial federation of trade unions formed in 1979 that
affiliated to the UDF in 1983. It was organized mainly by black workers
and later evolved into COSATU.
-
Federation of South African Women (FEDSAW or FSAW)
Organized in April 1954 as an attempt to create the first inter-racial
women’s association. Active in the organization were a large number of
teachers, nurses and other members of the small African professional
class. A few trade unionists made an important contribution to the
organization. The primary objective was to bring women together to
mobilize for equal rights and recognition before the law. In August,
1956, it organized a march by 20,000 women on the Union Buildings in
Pretoria to protest pass laws.
-
Freedom Front
Founded in 1994, an Afrikaner political party calling for Afrikaner
self-determination and for the establishment of a separate Afrikaner
state (volkstaat).
-
Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (FRELIMO)
Liberation movement formed in 1962 in the Portuguese colony of
Mozambique. It is now that country’s ruling party.
-
Garveyism
A form of black nationalism that took its inspiration from Marcus
Garvey, founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
and African Communities League in the USA (1921). Its call for “Africa
for the Africans, at home and abroad” Inspired racial pride and
Pan-Africanist consciousness in South Africa, Africa, and the diaspora.
-
Goldstone Commission
A commission of inquiry into political violence chaired by South African
judge Richard Goldstone and appointed by President F. W. de Klerk. It
exposed the government’s support for a shadowy “Third Force” that
instigated violence in black townships.
-
Grand apartheid
Refers to the government policy of the 1960s and 1970s that sought to
separate the country into white “South Africa” and African “homelands.”
Depriving Africans of citizenship rights in “white” South Africa and
relegating them to rural reserves. Was part of apartheid’s “separate
development” theory and practice (see “Bantustans”).
-
Groote Schuur Minute
Resolution of May 4, 1990 in which the African National Congress (ANC)
and the South African government agreed to political negotiations and an
end to armed struggle.
-
Growth, Employment, and Redistribution strategy (GEAR)
1996 government macroeconomic strategy that replaced the Reconstruction
and Development Program of 1994. GEAR was designed to find a balance
between meeting the basic needs of the people and finding the resources
to finance those needs. It included tax cuts, government fiscal and
monetary discipline, financial liberalization, and privatization of
parastatal corporations.
-
Homeland
(Also "Bantustan") Ethnically defined areas for Africans created on the
basis of the “Native Reserves” (Land Act, 1913). Constituted only 13% of
South African territory. Bantustans were to be given independence in
order to deny Africans citizenship rights in “white South Africa.” 3.5
million Africans were forcibly moved to Bantustans. Widespread poverty
in these areas helped employers secure a supply of cheap black labor.
Today, all South Africans have political rights in a unified country,
and Bantustans no longer exist.
-
Indaba
Nguni term literally meaning news; also used for discussion, subject,
village council or meeting.
-
Industrial and Commercial Workers Union (ICU)
Founded by Clements Kadalie (from Malawi) in 1919 to unionize dock
workers, rail workers and other municipal workers in Cape Town. The ICU
became a leading resistance organization in the 1920s, with popular
support in both urban and rural areas, as it focused on land issues,
wages and pass laws.
-
Inkatha
A Zulu ethnic nationalist organization founded in 1975 by Chief
Mangosuthu Buthelezi. Based on an earlier Zulu cultural group from the
1920s, it became the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) in 1990.
-
Inkathagate
Scandal resulting from the revelation in 1991 that Inkatha had received
apartheid government funds to fight against the ANC and UDF.
-
Islam
A world religion that believes in Allah as the only God and bases its
doctrine on the teachings and life of Muhammad, the Prophet of Allah.
Islam was brought to South Africa by exiles, convicts, and slaves from
Asia.
-
Job color bar
Law reserving certain types of work for people of a particular race.
-
Kgotla
Sotho term for a central court or meeting of a village, neighborhood, or
chiefdom.
-
Khoikhoi
Pastoralists and hunters who first inhabited southern Africa along the
Orange River and the highlands of the western escarpment. The Khoikhoi
initially resisted the Dutch, but eventually were wiped out. Survivors
were absorbed into colonial society as servants and formed part of South
Africa’s racially mixed population (see also “Coloured”).
-
Khoisan
Composite term used to denote both the pastoralist Khoikhoi and
hunter-gatherer San peoples - indigenous inhabitants of western South
Africa who spoke click languages distinct from Bantu languages such as
isiZulu.
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Kholwa
An Nguni word meaning “believer”, used to refer to an African Christian
or a person educated in mission schools.
-
Kwaito
A popular South African musical style developed in the 1990s, based on
American house music combined with African lyrics and rhythms.
-
Legalism
Political theory that encourages strict adherence to the law.
-
Liberal
Favors the autonomy of the individual and emphasizes civil liberties.
-
Liberalism
Political theory favoring the autonomy of the individual with strong
emphasis on civil liberties.
-
Liberation theology
Belief that Christianity preaches liberation of the poor and oppressed
and that Christians should work for equality and social justice.
-
Lobola
Nguni term for groom’s gift of cattle (ilobolo) for a bride (i.e.
“bridewealth”) as part of marriage ceremonies and family exchanges.
Today, lobola can also be given in cash.
-
Mozambican National Resistance (RENAMO)
Guerrilla group founded in 1975 by the white-minority government of
Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) to create a way to operate in Mozambique against
Zimbabwean liberation movements. After Mozambique’s independence in
1974, the South African government gave significant support to RENAMO in
order to destabilize Mozambique. Civil war continued until 1992, when a
peace accord was reached with RENAMO. It is now the main opposition
party in Mozambique. (See also “total strategy.”)
-
Muldergate scandal
In the 1970s, the South African Prime Minister John Vorster and Minister
of Information Dr. Connie Mulder were implicated in plans to use
government funds for propaganda purposes. A commission of inquiry
concluded that Vorster "knew everything" about the corruption. He
resigned in disgrace and was succeeded by P. W. Botha.
-
Multi-Party Negotiating Forum
On April 2, 1993, the Multi-Party Negotiation Process (MPNP) began in
Kempton Park outside Johannesburg. It laid the foundations for an
interim constitution that governed the country through the 1994
elections up to the adoption of a new constitution in 1996.
-
National Party (NP)
Afrikaner nationalist party founded in 1914 by Barry Hertzog. Came
together with the Purified National Party to win the 1948 elections that
ushered in apartheid. The party lost power to the ANC in 1994, returned
in 1997 as the “New National Party,” and was then dissolved in 2005.
-
National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA)
An Angolan political organization and military force that fought against
the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). Led by Jonas
Savimbi, it was supported financially and militarily by the South
African and U.S. governments. In 2002, UNITA entered into a ceasefire
with the Angolan government.
-
Nationalism
Strong adherence to one’s nation and national identity.
-
Pan-Africanism
The belief in a broad African identity, including all those of African
descent in Africa and abroad, and the need for African unity to fight
against slavery, racism, imperialism, and colonial occupation.
Pan-Africanism also refers to a world-wide movement for the political
unity of African states.
-
Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC)
Founded in 1959 in a split from the African National Congress. The PAC
rejected the ANC’s non-racial policies and promoted African Nationalism
and more mass action. It formed a militant wing, called Poqo, after the
Sharpeville massacre and worked both in exile and underground within
South Africa.
-
Pass
(also known as a dompas) Identification papers for African men and women
with racial classification and other personal information, including
employment status and history. The government used passes to restrict
movement of black people. Passes criminalized millions of ordinary South
Africans.
-
Pastoralism
An economic system based around the raising and herding of livestock.
-
Petty apartheid
Describes the era of the 1950s when laws similar to “Jim Crow” laws in
the United States prohibited inter-racial sex and marriage and strictly
segregated residential areas, schools, trains, buses, beaches, toilets,
parks, stadiums, ambulances, hospitals, and cemeteries. Brutally
enforced by police (see “pass laws”).
-
Pluralism
Toleration in a society of various ethnic, religious and cultural groups
in relative harmony.
-
Pondo
Pondo people, an important section of the Xhosa nation, living in the
Eastern Cape near the border with KwaZulu-Natal.
-
Pretoria Minute
Resolution of August 6, 1990 affirming the Groote Schuur Minute and
setting out terms for further negotiations
-
Purified National Party
Disputes over South Africa’s autonomy and the British Empire led to the
formation of the Gesuiwerde (Purified) Nasionale Party in 1934-35. A
coalition made up of both British and Afrikaner whites within the United
Party organized this party.
-
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nisl magna, pharetra non interdum scelerisque, congue in libero.
Pellentesque ultrices faucibus felis, vulputate aliquet sem volutpat
vitae. Praesent a est massa. Aenean porta feugiat sapien. Integer
venenatis fringilla orci eget volutpat. Suspendisse a odio arcu, in
dapibus felis. Curabitur sem eros, feugiat non aliquam feugiat, lacinia
id leo. Nam suscipit nibh eget purus ornare pellentesque.
Pellentesque vitae urna leo, scelerisque molestie ante. Suspendisse
potenti. Phasellus et eros sem. In accumsan tortor non enim condimentum
tincidunt. Etiam varius metus dui, ac interdum sem. Aliquam faucibus
ullamcorper nunc, id mollis enim convallis vitae. Suspendisse potenti.
Morbi eleifend, velit non blandit accumsan, sem felis faucibus orci, a
fermentum urna est ut mi. Curabitur convallis magna sed turpis
consectetur id venenatis augue pretium. Suspendisse potenti. Cras urna
elit, viverra a pretium quis, egestas ac odio. Integer vehicula, purus
vulputate luctus pretium, justo est luctus turpis, eu varius diam lacus
nec lorem. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et
malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Sed imperdiet elit urna, ac pharetra
lorem. Praesent quam ante, sagittis id pharetra in, molestie sit amet
orci. Maecenas adipiscing, eros et scelerisque viverra, orci turpis
pharetra eros, a egestas libero neque eu nisi. Etiam metus orci, euismod
sed adipiscing id, vestibulum et nulla. Integer sed velit leo, ac
sollicitudin sem.
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inceptos himenaeos. Ut justo sem, bibendum eu suscipit sed, consequat eu
libero. Morbi a ipsum at dui lacinia placerat sed ut neque. Mauris vel
enim at massa faucibus gravida ac a nibh. In et mi massa. Maecenas
elementum placerat massa, vel scelerisque quam scelerisque ac. Integer
mattis dolor dapibus tellus vestibulum et posuere nulla dignissim.
Quisque faucibus imperdiet dolor et tincidunt. Quisque congue sapien sit
amet urna eleifend porttitor. Vivamus quam nulla, convallis eget
porttitor at, aliquam quis nisi. Suspendisse magna quam, luctus non
aliquet in, viverra quis risus. In elementum rhoncus turpis fermentum
fringilla. Morbi hendrerit nibh at metus rhoncus dapibus.
Cras id est enim, vitae sagittis tellus. Integer faucibus eros ornare
erat elementum posuere. Proin facilisis feugiat tempor. Donec non odio
eu enim venenatis sagittis eget vehicula nisl. Duis nisl felis, faucibus
eu mollis sit amet, imperdiet tincidunt dolor. Cum sociis natoque
penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.
Phasellus lacinia porta metus in lobortis. Maecenas eu sagittis nisl.
Vestibulum faucibus semper tortor non dapibus. Etiam quis fringilla
neque. Proin quis augue nec lacus feugiat feugiat sit amet quis lectus.
Donec porta, felis id faucibus tempor, tellus libero interdum est, sit
amet molestie sem nulla sit amet ante.
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diam mattis accumsan. Quisque elit eros, pulvinar suscipit ultricies sit
amet, posuere non lorem. Aenean posuere lacus id arcu fringilla a
posuere diam luctus. Cras vehicula facilisis leo, sit amet tristique
libero rhoncus eu. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per
conubia nostra, per inceptos himenaeos. Morbi eu sapien ipsum, id
bibendum elit. Mauris eget lorem a nibh condimentum lacinia sit amet eu
metus. Curabitur dignissim, turpis non gravida vulputate, diam diam
porttitor sem, at dapibus lorem nunc in risus. Suspendisse potenti.
Vivamus dignissim sem libero, quis rutrum velit. Proin volutpat magna
sit amet mauris blandit at feugiat magna vestibulum.
-
Reconstruction and Development Program (RDP)
Progressive macroeconomic strategy established by the ANC-led Government
of National Unity in 1994 to improve the quality of life for the
majority of the population by expanding provision of housing, jobs,
basic services, education, and health care.
-
Record of Understanding
In 1992, Nelson Mandela and F.W. de Klerk signed the Record of
Understanding: a promise to resume formal investigations. In addition,
the document set a time table for the release of prisoners, a ban on
dangerous weapons, fencing for hostels, and provided for the creation of
an elected constitutional assembly to develop a new constitution for
South Africa.
-
San
Indigenous, nomadic, hunter-gather peoples who inhabited
the semi-arid regions of present-day South Africa, Namibia, and Botswana
and the mountainous areas of the Western Cape and Drakensburg
Mountains. As Europeans settled in the Western Cape, the San were
overpowered and almost completely exterminated.
-
Sanlam
Afrikaner insurance company founded in 1918 to counter English dominance
in big business and promote Afrikaner economic power. Today, it is a
major holding company that specializes in financial services.
-
Satyagraha
The philosophy and practice of nonviolent resistance formulated by
Mohandas Gandhi in the 1890s protest movements by Indians in South
Africa and anti-colonial movements in India, and adopted by other social
and civil rights movements. Satyagraha is composed of three parts: 1.
Satya-Truth, 2. Ahimsa-refusal to inflict injury on others, and 3.
Tapasya-willingness for self sacrifice.
-
Segregation
The classification and separation of people due to race. This
separation pervades all aspects of life, including separate schools,
housing, and public facilities.
-
Sotho
Farmers and herders in the interior of Southern Africa part of a broader
Sotho-Tswana language group. Basotho people live in or near the country
of Lesotho, as well as in the Free State and Gauteng regions of South
Africa.
-
South African Communist Party (SACP)
Known as the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) from 1921-1953, it
initially focused on the cause of white workers. By the late 1920s, it
was oriented to the needs of black workers. The CPSA was declared
illegal in 1950 and reformed as the South African Communist Party (SACP)
in 1953. The SACP is now part of the "Tripartite Alliance" with the
African National Congress and Congress of South African Trade Unions
(CASTU).
-
South African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU)
Founded in 1955 as a critical response to the decision of the Trade
Union Congress of South Africa to restrict its membership to non-African
unions. SACTU gained vast membership as the labor wing of the Congress
Alliance.
-
South African Indian Congress (SAIC)
Established in May 1923 by a coalition of political organizations aimed
at promoting Indian rights in Natal and the rest of South Africa. During
apartheid, the SAIC cooperated with the African National Congress,
jointly launching the Defiance Campaign of 1952 and joining the Congress
Alliance.
-
South African Students Organization (SASO)
A Black Consciousness organization of black university students formed
in 1969, with Steve Biko as its first president. SASO helped form the
Black Peoples Convention in 1972.
-
Tabooed
forbidden
-
Total strategy
Policy of the apartheid regime developed in the late 1970s under the
leadership of P.W. Botha. Aimed to respond to a perceived “total
onslaught” on South Africa by Communists and the international community
seeking to undermine apartheid. Military campaigns destabilized
neighboring countries and armed force was used to repress dissent in
South Africa. Botha also initiated some political reforms that tinkered
with apartheid but maintained white supremacy.
-
Township
Black residential areas on the outskirts of South African cities created
by the white government.
-
Trade Union Council of South Africa (TUCSA)
Largest federation of registered trade unions in South Africa, formed in
1954 along racial lines. In 1974 TUSCA allowed African unions to join
with its white, Colored and Indian affiliates, but they remained under
the direction of white unions. It disbanded in 1986.
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Transitional Executive Council
A council formed in 1993 to oversee the transition from apartheid to
democracy. This process included the formation of an interim government,
setting the terms for the 1994 election, and changing the South African
flag and national anthem.
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Treatment Action Campaign (TAC)
Social movement launched in December 1998 to campaign for greater access
to HIV treatment for all South Africans. Led by Zachie Achmat, the TAC
succeeded making anti-retrovirals (ARVs) available in public hospitals
in March 2004, although widespread access to the drugs has not been
realized.
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Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
Government body created by the Promotion of National Unity and
Reconciliation Act of 1995 for the purpose of investigating politically
motivated human rights violations committed from 1960-1994. Victims and
perpetrators of human rights violations testified before the commission,
often in public hearings. Amnesty was granted to applicants if two
criteria were met: (1) the crimes were politically motivated, and (2)
the applicant was fully truthful.
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Tsotsis
Young black men in urban townships who participate in criminal activity
and gangs.
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Tswana
Farmers and herders of the Sotho-Tswana language group in the central
and western high grass lands in the North West, Limpopo, and Free State
provinces, as well as in Botswana.
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Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK)
Armed wing of the African National Congress established in 1961 to force
the apartheid regime to the bargaining table through acts of sabotage
and, if necessary, military campaigns.
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United Democratic Front (UDF)
Founded in 1983 as an umbrella body that unified numerous unions, and
youth, religious, civic, and sport organizations to oppose apartheid. It
was initially founded to protest the introduction of the Tricameral
Constitution. It affiliated with the ANC and led mass protests and
boycotts throughout the 1980s. It disbanded in 1991.
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Venda
Venda-speaking Africans who lived in the far northern territories of
South Africa (today’s Limpopo province), where they were well-known
ironworkers and copper miners.
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Vlakplaas
Apartheid death squad based on a farm in Natal called Vlakplaas. It was
established in the late 1980s and led by Eugene de Kock. Vlakplaas
members committed many gross human rights violations against
anti-apartheid activists.
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Volkstaat
Independent Afrikaner state sought by right-wing Afrikaners in the
1990s.
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Wiehahn Commission
Government commission (1977-79) to address black unions and industrial
relations. Following the commission’s recommendations, the government
legalized African trade unions and ended the job color bar.
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Wildcat strike
A strike without formal union authorization, organization, or support.
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word 1
a definition
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word 2
blah blha
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Xhosa
Farmers and cattle-herders loosely organized into chiefdoms in the
region now known as the Eastern Cape. The second most common African
language in South Africa (isiXhosa, part of the Nguni branch of Bantu
languages).
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Zulu
Farmers and herders originally from today’s KwaZulu-Natal province.
Formed a large militarized state under Shaka in the 1810s; lost its
independence as a result of the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879. Most common
African language in South Africa (isiZulu, part of the Nguni branch of
Bantu languages).