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Comprehensive Summary of A level History 2F.2 South Africa from apartheid state to rainbow nation pearson edexcel $14.83   Add to cart

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Comprehensive Summary of A level History 2F.2 South Africa from apartheid state to rainbow nation pearson edexcel

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the entire textbook for south africa summarised - everything you need to know for a level history 2F.2 south africa

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  • December 15, 2023
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2b.1:

Pre-1948:

- 4 racial groups: whites, Africans, coloured people, Indians
o Africans = largest, 8.5 million in 1951, Zulu = largest African kingdom
o Whites = Afrikaners/of British Descent
- WW2, 180,000 white men in armed forces, opportunities for blacks increased
o After war, blacks + whites competed for jobs
o ‘poor white problem’ appealed to by Nationalists
- Black migrants sent to townships outside cities (largest later became Soweto)
- Whites owned over 80% of land
o Black people worked as labourers on white-owned farms or reserves
- 1899-1902, Britain fought Anglo-Boer war
- Hertzog founded ANC 1913, won 1924 election
o 1934, Hertzog & Smuts founded United Party

1948 Election:

- 1939, Parliament voted to support British war effort, Hertzog resigned
- Growing Afrikaner nationalism
o Broederbond encouraged Christian, Republican, Nationalist outlook
o Calvinist Dutch reformed Churches supported idea of autonomous ‘volk’
o Ossewabrandwag – Afrikaner anti-war movement, 300,000 members at peak
o 1938 centenary of the Great Trek
- Smuts = pragmatist, understood need for black workers
- Henry Gluckman (Minister of Health), advocated healthcare expansion (but segregated)
- Malan won 38% of vote, Smuts won 49% -but Westminster electoral System

Implementing Apartheid, 1948-59:

- Strengthening the NP
o 1949, 6 members of parliament added for whites in Namibia
o 1951 Separate Representation of Voters Act
 Removed coloured vote with simple majority
o 1953, NP increased vote from 400,000 to nearly 600,000 – narrowly outpolled UP
o 1950s, state employment increased: 482,000 to 799,000 – majority new employees = Afrikaners
- Hendrik Verwoerd:
o Minister of Native Affairs (1950-58), prime minister (1958-66)
- Apartheid Laws
o 1951 Bantu Authorities Act
o 1959 Promotion of Bantu Self-Government Act
 Envisaged self-governing African units based around traditional authorities
o 1949 Mixed Marriage Act (prohibited marriage across racial boundaries)
o 1950 Immortality Act (prohibited sex across racial boundaries)
o 1950 Population Registration Act (assigned all to one of 4 racial groups)
- Group Areas Acts
o Sophiatown
 Racially mixed by predominantly African, housed 60,000
 Unusually, Africans able to hold private land

,  Removal planning began 1950, bulldozed into rubble within 6 years
o Durban
 Third largest city, housed 450,000 1951 – 1/3 Indian, 1/3 African, 1/3 White
 1949, Africans attacked Indians who they felt exploited them as landlords/storekeepers
 142 died, over 1,000 injured in riots & police suppression
 1950s, Group Areas enforced
 By 1965, shacks largely removed from Cato Manor, tens of thousands of
Africans moved to townships, 41,000 Indians moved from central areas
 Private property ownership allowed in Indian suburbs (unlike African townships)
o District Six
 Multi-racial, largely Coloured, near Cape Town city centre
 Group areas enforced from 1966, 60,000 forcible removed, buildings bulldozed

Pass Laws:

- 1953 Reservation of Separate Amenities Act (separate facilities, ‘petty apartheid’)
- 1952 Natives Abolition of Passes Act (reference books introduced)  1956, extended to women
- 1952 Urban Areas Act (gave urban rights to minority of Africans who were born in town, worked there for
10 years or lived there for 15 years)
- Pass law convictions increased from 164,324 in 1952 to 384,497 in 1962
- However, failed to keep Africans out of cities
o SA African urban population rose from 1.8mil 1946 to 3.5mil 1960 (over whole white population)

Education:

- Only 24% blacks literate in 1951 census
- 1953 Bantu Education Act (segregated education, extended education to African children)
- Fear of tsotsis (street youths) & need for skilled workers = drivers behind expansion of education
- Fort Hare university became centre of black student opposition
o 1959 Extension of University Education Act
 brought Fort Hare under gov. control, planned for full segregation of largely white
English-language universities, planned for new universities for other races

The Tomlinson Report:

- 1955 commission report under Professor F.R. Tomlinson
- Believed economic development of former reserves had to be at heart of apartheid
- Believed Bantustans could be transformed with massive state investment of £100mil (£7bil in 2015)
- Recommended: pushing families off the land to create bigger ‘economic units’ for farming, major funding
for rural industries, private enterprises to invest in these areas
- Verwoerd rejected suggestions, believed ‘Bantu’ should develop ‘at their own pace’
o Whites wouldn’t support the spending, didn’t want subsidized industries to compete with urban
white businesses, if Africans lost land they would move to cities (‘oorstrooming’)

The Bantustans:

- ‘Betterment’ and ‘Rehabilitation’
o Strategy to stop environmental degradation by dividing pastures into paddocks
 Animals moved from paddock to paddock to avoid over-grazing
o Rural families moved from scattered settlements to compact villages (over 1mil)
o Africans forced to sell livestock to ease pressure on pastures
o Culling of livestock so unpopular, gov had to abandon it in 1960s

, - NP not prepared to divide SA equally, Africans didn’t associate with historic chieftaincies

The Treason Trial:

- Congress Alliance = coalition of anti-apartheid movts (ANC, Indian Congress, trade unionists, etc.)
- 1956, 156 members of Congress Alliance arrested in raids, accused of treason
- All accused acquitted in 1961
- Demonstrated multi-racial nature of anti-apartheid struggle, ANC leaders tied up in proceedings for years

1948 Political Opposition:

- No single group or ideology, divided by NP, geographic zone, race, class & interest
- strikes, boycotts, protests, rallies
o not always at NP: e.g. 1949 Durban riots, Zulu people attacked Indians
o illegal occupations of private land (e.g. James Mpanza = leader in Johannesburg)
o 1946 miners strike, Smuts called army to assist police in breaking strike
o 1944 & 1949 bus boycotts

The ANC:

- ANC established 1912
o initially spurred by creation of Union of South Africa 1910 (blacks excluded from rights)
o opposed 1913 Natives Land Act
- The ANC Youth League
o ANC youth league founded 1944 – more radical, Africanist ideology, self-determination
o Initially led by Anton Lembede, included: A.P. Mda, Oliver Tambo, Nelson Mandela
o 1949 Programme of Action, adopted by ANC December 1949
 Moved from concession-seeking to militant liberation
 ANC mostly adhered to non-racialism
o Helped to oust moderate ANC president, Dr Xuma  1952 Albert Luthuli became president
- Links with other organisations
o NP banned Communist Party 1950, alliance between Communist Party and ANC
o Whites, Indians & Coloured people not accepted into ANC
 SA Indian Congress, whites coloured formed parallel Congress organisations
o Liberal Party formed 1953
 Attracted black support but didn’t work with ANC or communists

The Defiance Campaign:

- 1952, influenced by Ghandi’s non-violent civil disobedience, aimed to break restrictions & risk arrest
- Most arrests, (6,000 of 8,000) made in Eastern Cape cities of Port Elizabeth and East London
- ANC membership increased from 4,000 to 100,000
- Case Study: East London
o East Bank in East London, 35,000 people, people lived in shacks, high infant mortality (37%
babies died in first year), high poverty
o ANC branch there led by Alcott Gwentshe & C.J. Fazzie
o Defiance Campaign began in June 1952 with rally of 1,500: hymns, ANC slogans, many arrested
o October, campaign split into moderate Gwentshe & radial Fazzie, riots in Port Elizabeth
o Early November, Minister of Justice banned public gatherings for a month, sent reinforcements
o 9th November 1952, meeting of 800, threw stones at police, police fired, buildings burnt

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