enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Internal resistance to apartheid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_resistance_to...

    Mass action against the ruling National Party (NP) government, coupled with South Africa's growing international isolation and economic sanctions, were instrumental in leading to negotiations to end apartheid, which began formally in 1990 and ended with South Africa's first multiracial elections under a universal franchise in 1994.

  3. African Resistance Movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_Resistance_Movement

    The African Resistance Movement (ARM) was a militant anti-apartheid resistance movement, which operated in South Africa during the early and mid-1960s. It was founded in 1960, as the National Committee of Liberation (NCL), by members of South Africa's Liberal Party, which advocated the dismantling of apartheid and gradually transforming South Africa into a free multiracial society.

  4. Mafika Gwala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mafika_Gwala

    Gwala was active in the struggle against apartheid and a leading light of the 1970s Black Consciousness movement, of which he says: We didn’t take Black Consciousness as a kind of Bible, it was just a trend, which was a necessary one because it meant bringing in what the white opposition [to apartheid] couldn’t bring into the struggle.

  5. Vaal uprising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaal_uprising

    The Vaal uprising was a period of popular revolt in black townships in apartheid South Africa, beginning in the Vaal Triangle on 3 September 1984. Sometimes known as the township revolt and driven both by local grievances and by opposition to apartheid, the uprising lasted two years and affected most regions of the country.

  6. Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afrikaner_Weerstandsbeweging

    On 7 July 1973, Eugène Terre'Blanche, a former police officer, called a meeting of several men in Heidelberg, Gauteng, in the then-Transvaal Province of South Africa. He was disillusioned by what he thought were Prime Minister B. J. Vorster's "liberal views" of racial issues in the White minority country, after a period in which Black majorities had ascended to power in many former colonies.

  7. Soweto uprising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soweto_uprising

    Even the Bantustan regimes chose English and an indigenous African language as official languages. In addition, English was gaining prominence as the language most often used in commerce and industry. The 1974 decree was intended to force the reverse of the decline of Afrikaans among black Africans.

  8. Defiance Campaign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defiance_Campaign

    The United Nations took note and called the apartheid policy a "threat to peace". [15] In the middle of April 1953, Chief Albert Luthuli, the President-General of the ANC, proclaimed that the Defiance Campaign would be called off so that the resistance groups could reorganize taking into consideration the new political climate in South Africa. [17]

  9. Black People's Convention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_People's_Convention

    The Black People's Convention (BPC) was a national coordinating body for the Black Consciousness movement of South Africa. Envisaged as a broad-based counterpart to the South African Students' Organisation, the BPC was active in organising resistance to apartheid from its establishment in 1972 until it was banned in late 1977.