In a nutshell: * The white people got all the good stuff. * The black people got all the bad stuff. * Black people couldn't go to a good school. * Black people couldn't get a good job. * Black people couldn't live in a good house. * Black people had to pay more tax. * The black people weren't allowed to use the white people's stuff. * If a black person used the white people's stuff, they got a heavy punishment. * If a black person did something to a white person, they got an extremely heavy punishment. * If a white person did something to a black person, they got an extremely light punishment.
The legally enforced separation in living places and educational and recreational facility's between Caucasian and other races. The Caucasians lived well and the others didn't .
it was hard.
Unfair.
The majority of South Africans experienced restrictions in education, were restricted to living only in certain areas, were limited to certain, mainly menial, jobs. This kept them in poverty and squalor. The majority was completely segregated, and were not allowed to use facilities restricted for whites, including transport and even restaurants. The minority lead a privileged life, with freedom of association and the guarantee of a job because of the color of their skins.
By the use of guns and brute force. The above answer is simplistic and one sided. Apartheid was a political and social system that control the whole aspect of life in South Africa. Laws made it difficult if not impossible for blacks to move freely thereby dooming them to a tribal life with few opportunities to excel in life. Migrant worker policies destroyed the fabric of family life in black families. Group Areas Act made it impossible for blacks to live where they choose. A schooling system designed to keep students ignorant and virtually uneducated. The list goes on and on but the point is that force was but one strategy used by the Apartheid regime.
Apartheid was apparent in that black people could not use the same buses, railway carriages, public toilets, beaches and many other facilities.
Because they had to work together to maintain the irrigation system.
The living conditions for the native Africans during the time of apartheid were very terrible. The Afrikaner government of the time had made it so that black people could not own any land in 87% of South Africa due to the Group Areas Act enforced in 1950. The black people were only aloud in 13% of their own land even though they vastly outnumbered the white people in population and the 13% of the country that they were aloud to own which were called the reserves had unfertile soil and no real residential construction. The Africans were forced to make their homes out of corrugated iron, scrap wood and pretty much what ever they could find and the cost of the land was very expensive and unfortunately not much has changed since the abolition of apartheid.
Kaffir Boy: The True Story of a Black Youth's Coming of Age in Apartheid South Africa is Mark Mathabane's 1986 autobiography about life under the South African apartheid regime. It focuses on the brutality of the apartheid system and how he escaped from it, and from the township Alexandra, to become a well-known tennis player.
In the memoir "Kaffir Boy" by Mark Mathabane, the main conflict arises from the oppressive system of apartheid in South Africa, which perpetuates racial segregation and discrimination. The protagonist faces internal conflict as he struggles to reconcile his aspirations for a better future with the limited opportunities available to him as a black person living under apartheid. Additionally, there is conflict within his family as they grapple with poverty, violence, and the desire for a better life.
nelson Mandela chalenged apartheid and go sent to prison for life.
no
Life was generally stable and peaceful under the Europeans.
he uses the poem to show the reader the negative effects the city has on his life and identity as a black man living in the apartheid South Africa.
Nelson Mandela was sent to jail for his anti-apartheid activism against the South African government, which imposed a system of racial segregation and discrimination. He was convicted of sabotage and sentenced to life in prison in 1964.
life science
it is nonliving Seed is living as it has got capacity to grow to a plant under favourable conditions. Life is dormant in seeds. Seeds become dead under unfavourable storage conditions. What is life? In simple terms life is the ability to multiply. Seeds may need energy to keep living as we say seeds are living under favourable conditions. The energy needs may be minimal.
The majority of South Africans experienced restrictions in education, were restricted to living only in certain areas, were limited to certain, mainly menial, jobs. This kept them in poverty and squalor. The majority was completely segregated, and were not allowed to use facilities restricted for whites, including transport and even restaurants. The minority lead a privileged life, with freedom of association and the guarantee of a job because of the color of their skins.
Julia Segar has written: 'Fruits of Apartheid' -- subject(s): Apartheid, Blacks, Politics and government, Social life and customs
By the use of guns and brute force. The above answer is simplistic and one sided. Apartheid was a political and social system that control the whole aspect of life in South Africa. Laws made it difficult if not impossible for blacks to move freely thereby dooming them to a tribal life with few opportunities to excel in life. Migrant worker policies destroyed the fabric of family life in black families. Group Areas Act made it impossible for blacks to live where they choose. A schooling system designed to keep students ignorant and virtually uneducated. The list goes on and on but the point is that force was but one strategy used by the Apartheid regime.