Title: South Africa
1South Africas Apartheid
- Consequences and Cultural Responses
2Outline
- Apartheid (e.g. Cry Freedom)
- Response 1 Long Nights Journey into the Day
- Response 2 the poems about physical sufferings
- Response 3 about Race Relations and
anti-Apartheid movements the other cultural
examples - Response 4 about Gender Relations
- Response 5 about tradition and individual vs.
society The Prophetess - Response 6 more indirect styles
- Response 7 musiccrossover style
3Apartheid
- a method of divide and rule to counteract the
so-called "black danger" Afrikaner rulers saw
Africans as threatening to overrun or engulf them
by their sheer numbers. - Brutal racism imprisonment, police killings and
murder
4Apartheid
- Institutionalized racism examples of the laws --
Population Registration Act Group Areas Act The
Abolition of Passes and Coordination of Documents
Act (? Sharpville Massacre) The Bantu
Authorities Act (or Homeland Act) - language education (? Soweto uprising, the
beginning of the end)
5Soweto Student Uprising
- "It was a picture that got the worlds attention
A frozen moment in time that showed 13-year-old
Hector Peterson dying after being struck down by
a policeman's bullet. At his side was his
17-year-old sister. (source)
6Cry Freedom
- Opening The raid on Crossroads squatters camp
- Ending Soweto uprising
- Bikos ideas
- Black Consciousness
- his speech
- his self defense (naked racism)
- The visit to a black township
- Afrikaners version
- Last view of landscape
7Response 1 Long Nights Journey into the Day
- South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) - Amy Biehl-- Amy Biehl, an American student in
South Africa working with the ANC, was killed by
four Black youths during political unrest in
Guguletu township. - Why they kill -- "Killing someone like her
exposed both our anger and the conditions under
which we lived. If we had been living reasonably,
we would not have killed her."-- Easy Nofemela
on the killing of Amy Biehl
8Long Nights Journey into the Day
- 2. "Cradock 4." Eric Taylor, a white person who
had worked (and killed) to uphold the apartheid
government and who now had a change of heart and
was remorseful for his acts. - His way of killing beat the four persons (who
were supposed to be movement leaders, but one was
actually unknown to them) to death and then burn
them. - (clips 1his belief, 2 his change )
- The widows refused to agree with amnesty.
9Long Nights Journey into the Day
- 3. Robert McBride-- an ANC activist
- "No one has apologized to me yet for either
oppressing me directly or indirectly or happily
benefitting from my oppression"-- Robert McBride
on apology - Is he a terrorist? Clip MaBride vs. a victims
family
10Long Nights Journey into the Day
- 4. Guguletu 7--the story of seven young men who
were killed in what now appears to have been a
set-up designed to make the apartheid police look
as if they had killed a group of dangerous
terrorists. - Mbelo as a black policeman
- the process of reconciliation
11Questions to ponder (1) What is justice?
- . . . Restorative justice. And this is the
option that we have chosen. But there is justice.
the perpetrators don't get off scot free. They
have to confess publicly, in the full glare of
television lights, that they did those ghastly
things. And that's pretty, pretty tough."--
Desmond Tutu on restorative versus retributive
justice
12Questions to ponder (1) What is justice?
- An contrast The Washington Post June 8, 2000 -
"The nation's war on drugs unfairly targets
African Americans, who are far more likely to be
imprisoned for drug offenses than whites, even
though far more whites use illegal drugs than
blacks,.... Overall, black men are sent to
prisons on drug charges at 13 times the rate of
white men.... Overall, one in 20(1/20) black men
over the age of 18 is in a state or federal
prison compared with one in 180 (1/180) white
men."
13Questions (2) How to resolve large-scale
conflicts
- TRC dialogue and collaborative problem solving,
arbitration, mediation, - law enforcement, public policy,
- non-violent demonstrations,
- contracts, treaties
- use of force and imposed peace by the victor over
the vanquished.
14Q (3) How do we face (collective) violence
survive trauma?
- to seek VENGEANCE, RETRIBUTION, or to FORGIVE?
- To face it through a certain ritual and with a
group of people, or to face it alone. Example
the journalist whose father was killed. 1, 2 - A related question what drive them to brutal
killings? How do we avoid making errors we are
induced to make by historic circumstances?
15Q (4) Who can forgive and how?
- Who should be empowered to grant forgiveness
when a person is murdered? Can the family members
ever forgive on behalf of the lost loved one, or
can they only forgive with regard to their own
loss? - Is the TRC really engaged in offering forgiveness
or only amnesty protection against prosecution? - Can we forgive were we in the same boat? Do we
dare to confess and apologize? - 80 of those who applied for amnesty were black
16Responses 2 Poems Related to Physical Suffering
17Response 3 Stories re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations
Bessie Head
Mbulelo Mzamane
Nadine Gordimer
18Response 3 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid
movements, Black Identity Race Relations
19Responses 3 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations
20Responses 4 Poems Related to Gender Relations
Antjie Krog
21Responses 5 Indirect treatments
- Njabulo S. Ndebele Pay more attention to
individual psychology and the influences of
tradition. - e.g. Prophetess
Mazisi Kunene The Final Supplication
22Responses 5 . Prophetess
- On what is the boys attention focused when he
visits the prophetess? Are they signs of her
spirituality? - dog darkness, vine, doek (African headscarf,
11) camphor (12) her coughing
23Prophetess
- 2. The people on the bus How do they relate to
each other? And to the prophetess? How are they
different from each other? - -- the man with a balaclava (Woollen hat) the
young man at the back, the young man with
immaculate dress the big woman, the other women
24Prophetess
- 3. Compared with the peoples discussion, how
does the boy relate to the prophetess? What
breaks the spell the prophetess has on him? What
does the ending mean?
25Response 6 Indirect treatments
- J. M. Coetzee Foe Historical revision or
metafiction.
26Response 6 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations
William Kentridge
27Response 7 Paul Simons Graceland
- Township Jive this very up, very happy music
- a mixture of early rocknroll and African
- Traditional music.
- acapella group Ladysmith Black Mambazo
- General M.D. Shirinda and The Gaza Sisters
Miriam Mekeba
28Response 7 Music --"crossover style"
- Enoch Sontonga's beautiful African hymn "Nkosi
Sikilel'i Africa" (God Bless Africa 1897) an
anthem and symbol of struggle to generations of
Africans - -- the influence of the missionary school music
training - the innovative a cappella vocal harmonies of
mbube music, while the song itself would serve
as. ? iscathamiya ("to walk on one's toes
lightly"). e.g. Ladysmith Black Mambazo
29Ladysmith Black Mambazo
- ISICATHAMIYA (Is-Cot-A-Me-Ya) born in the mines
of South Africa. Black workers were taken by rail
to work far away from their homes and their
families. Poorly housed and paid worse, they
would entertain themselves after a six-day week
by singing songs into the wee hours every Sunday
morning. Cothoza Mfana they called themselves,
"tip toe guys", referring to the dance steps
choreographed so as to not disturb the camp
security guards. When miners returned to the
homelands, the tradition returned with them.
(source http//www.mambazo.com/bio.html ) - Example 1
30HOMELESS (Paul Simon and Joseph Shabalala)
- Emaweni webaba Silale maweni . . . Homeless,
homeless Moonlight sleeping on a midnight lake
Homeless, homeless Moonlight sleeping on a
midnight lake . . . - Strong wind destroy our home Many dead, tonight
it could be you Strong wind, strong wind Many
dead, tonight it could be you
31References
- LONG NIGHT'S JOURNEY INTO DAY STUDY GUIDE
http//www.newsreel.org/guides/longnight.htm - LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO
- Homeless lyrics
- South African Music http//wus.africaonline.com/Af
ricaOnline/music/Safrica.html