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Soweto Massacre

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A city of northeast South Africa southwest of Johannesburg. ... South Africa now recognizes June 16 as 'Youth Day' in honor of the victims of that massacre. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Soweto Massacre


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Meaning Of Soweto
  • A city of northeast South Africa southwest of
    Johannesburg. Comprised of a number of townships
    inhabited by Black South Africans, it was the
    scene of violent rioting in 1976, when a student
    protest led to clashes with police. Population
    1,460,000.

3
Cause
  • On June 16, 1976, over 10,000 students in the
    township of Soweto rose up against the apartheid
    regime in South Africa. Police fired on the
    protest killing hundreds, and sparked a
    nationwide rebellion.
  • The problem in Soweto started because the
    government wanted the students to be taught
    Afrikaans.

4
Problem
  • This was a problem for the students because the
    students felt that Afrikaans was the language of
    the oppressor.
  • This was not the only source of the problem.
    Some other problems that could have sparked the
    uprising were overcrowding and high drop out
    rates in schools, the racist content of school
    programs, inadequate, poorly maintained
    facilities, and the ideology of the BCM
    penetrated into the schools

5
Rights Denied
  • Denied access to jobs set aside for the white
    minority, Black students received inferior
    educations.
  • In 1975, the government spent about 15 times
    more on the education of a white child than on
    the education of a Black child. As explained by
    Hendrik Verwoerd, an architect of the apartheid
    system, Natives must be taught at an early age
    that equality with the Europeans is not for them.

6
Why They Rebelled
  • The children were tired of the results of the
    apartheid policies, tired of seeing their parents
    oppressed by the government, tired of being
    denied their freedom, and they felt that they had
    nothing to lose.
  • The morning of June 16, 1976 (Thompson 212), the
    students took action.

7
The Uprising
  • The uprising began at 930 am when large numbers
    of school children marched down the road carrying
    large placards. Not many citizens of Soweto were
    alarmed or surprised by this protest, because
    political protests had become an established part
    of township life.
  • The attitude of these protestors was simple. The
    protestors plan was to not taunt or do anything
    that would instigate fighting with the police .
    Just to protest and voice their opinions.
  • The protests broke into violence when the Soweto
    police came and started firing what most
    protestors thought were plastic bullets at the
    protestors. Yet, when children began dropping to
    the cement like flies, the protestors fled. While
    attempting to flee, some smaller children were
    trampled to death by other protestors and
    witnesses attempting to flee.
  • Trying to protect themselves, the children began
    throwing sticks, rocks, bricks, schoolbags, or
    whatever they could pick up off the ground. The
    fighting continued for several hours. When the
    fighting had ceased, out of the fifteen thousand
    schoolchildren involved in the protests the
    casualty count was 172 blacks killed by police,
    and 439 blacks injured by the police. Many blacks
    were wondering whom to blame for this

8
Who They Thought Was To Blame
  • The person that many South Africans feel was the
    cause of the Soweto uprising, as well as many
    bother awful events in South Africa's history was
    P.W. Botha, the South African Bantu Education
    Minister. Botha was the individual that was said
    to have come up with and institute the idea that
    one half of all the students' subjects were to be
    taught in Afrikaans . This ruling upset many
    different African citizens.

9
Soweto Today
  • Nearly 30 years since that infamous day in the
    township of Soweto when hundreds of thousands of
    students protested Bantu Education. The police
    waited for the marchers near a dusty intersection
    and unleashed hell on innocent children.
  • Official reports claimed that 700 children died
    over the course of the year that the student
    uprisings occurred more than likely, these were
    conservative estimates. South Africa now
    recognizes June 16 as Youth Day in honor of the
    victims of that massacre.
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