Apartheid (pronounced apartide)
The term was called "Apartheid"
apartheid
Apartied
Apartheid was the official name for racial separation, given by the 1948 Nationalist government of South Africa.
multi cultural
The South African socio-legal system that institutionalized racial discrimination was known as "apartheid". An Afrikaans word meaning " to hold apart" (or, less literally, "separation"), apartheid maintained strict segregation between the white minority and all other races of South Africans
Segregation is the separation of people into racial groups without reasonable justification on the basis of discrimination. Racial segregation is outlawed in the United States, but unfortunately it may still exist within social norms.
The government in South Africa made a policy of racial segregation against all people who were not white. As well as black indigent Africans, this involved any non-white races. This is called apartheid or a government policy of racial segregation. The man who led the people against the apartheid was Nelson Mandela.Read more: What_was_the_racial_segregation_in_South_Africa
racial discrimination and separation
Apartheid was the official name for racial separation, given by the 1948 Nationalist government of South Africa.
Racial segregation
Apartheid.
South africa
An apartheider is a proponent of the apartheid system - the discriminatory policy of racial separation used by South Africa between 1948 and 1990.
Legal separation of blacks and whites was commonly referred to as segregation in the United States, particularly during the Jim Crow era. This practice was enforced through laws known as Jim Crow laws which mandated racial segregation in public facilities and institutions.
The word apartheid (a-par-tide) fits the definition above. This word is often linked to racial separation that existed in South Africa (and perhaps still exists to an extent today), but it can be applied to other examples.
multi cultural
The system of racial separation was started by the British after they won the Ango-Boer war in 1902. In 1948, Prime Minster of the new Republic of South Africa Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd and The South Africa government formalized it as the "system of independent/separate development" and it was later called "apartheid".
South Africa
Apartheid.