Apartheid
Answer this question… Black South Africans were forced to carry documents to identify themselves to authorities.
Africans ran to mining areas for job opportunities
A homeland is a place where the South Africans were forced when invaders came. They were in the inside of South Africa instead of the coast. ---- A homeland was an area within South Africa reserved for native Africans under the Apartheid policy of the South African government which was in government from about 1939 to 1993. It was in principle identical to the Reservations in the United States which are set aside for native Americans (American Indians). The areas were nominally self governing and land ownership was reserved for native Africans. This was done as a way of satisfying black demands for self government and preserving white control over the majority of the economically important areas of south Africa. Some homelands were granted independence from South Africa as separate states, but that independence was not recognised by any other country in the world and has now fallen away. In the end the homelands failed as a means of controlling black south africans. South Africa is now one country, under one government and homelands no longer exist. All that remains of it are large areas of tribal tenure land, where traditional land ownership and cultural practices are encouraged.
Nonwhites were forced to live in separate areas from the white minority.
Many black families were forced to move to poor rural areas that were called Homeland. African government says it created homelands to stay separate with white and there were few jobs or resources in these areas. Schools in the homelands were very poor, and there was little access to health care.
Answer this question… Black South Africans were forced to carry documents to identify themselves to authorities.
Africans ran to mining areas for job opportunities
A homeland is a place where the South Africans were forced when invaders came. They were in the inside of South Africa instead of the coast. ---- A homeland was an area within South Africa reserved for native Africans under the Apartheid policy of the South African government which was in government from about 1939 to 1993. It was in principle identical to the Reservations in the United States which are set aside for native Americans (American Indians). The areas were nominally self governing and land ownership was reserved for native Africans. This was done as a way of satisfying black demands for self government and preserving white control over the majority of the economically important areas of south Africa. Some homelands were granted independence from South Africa as separate states, but that independence was not recognised by any other country in the world and has now fallen away. In the end the homelands failed as a means of controlling black south africans. South Africa is now one country, under one government and homelands no longer exist. All that remains of it are large areas of tribal tenure land, where traditional land ownership and cultural practices are encouraged.
north east south and west
Races have been around forever. They consist of grouping people in particular areas of the world. As, Africans and Americans have different races; they live in a separate part of the world. Americans live on the western side of the world, and Africans live on the south eastern part of the world. They just have different cultures. When one culture is away from another they have different beliefs and ways they do things.
There are no separate time zones north or south of the Arctic Circle.
Nonwhites were forced to live in separate areas from the white minority.
Enslaved Africans were taken from the "Rice Coast" of Gambia and Sierra Leone. Rice was little known in the Americas at this time, and was a lucrative business in the Lowland areas.
Combined schools and forced busing were used to desegregate schools in the South. Even after apartheid ended, some areas of South Africa did not immediately desegregate.
Many black families were forced to move to poor rural areas that were called Homeland. African government says it created homelands to stay separate with white and there were few jobs or resources in these areas. Schools in the homelands were very poor, and there was little access to health care.
There are many problems in South Africa, such as crime, lack of infrastructure. Furthermore there is now political instability. Jacob Zuma, the most likely next president, has been dubbed a fool by the press. BEE may convince those of other races to leave as their is not as great opportunity in South Africa. Most South Africans are unaware of the problems of other 1st world countries.
only able to buy houses in certain areas