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Everyday scenes—children playing, Archbishop Desmond Tutu praying—make up the bulk of "Rise and Fall of Apartheid," an exhibition now on display at Museum Africa in Johannesburg, South Africa ...
Apartheid became law in 1948, when the National Party of South Africa made official the economic, political, and social practices associated with white supremacy that had long been in play. The ...
The photos were all taken outside of South Africa, in nearby countries that played host to anti-apartheid organizations between the mid-nineteen-seventies and the early nineties.
South Africa’s apartheid era -- when segregation was legal and the white minority ruled -- is remembered as a time of rampant violence and divisiveness. But a photo exhibit this summer showcases ...
Photos of Dylann Roof, the man who killed nine people last week in the Charleston Massacre, surfaced of him wearing flags from apartheid-era South Africa. CNN values your feedback 1.
An exhibition of photographs and moving images telling the history of apartheid is one of the events held in South Africa to celebrate 20 years of democracy.
One of the architects of apartheid in South Africa, former prime minister Hendrik Verwoerd, wrote in the Rand Daily Mail in 1961 that “Israel, like South Africa, is an apartheid state” after ...
This weekend marks the 30th anniversary since the fall of South African apartheid. Since then, the young democracy has struggled to find its footing as it grapples with apartheid’s legacy and ...
Apartheid, from an Afrikaans word meaning "apart-hood," is a system of legalized segregation that was widely practiced in South Africa and enacted by law by the white-ruled Nationalist Party in 1948.
South African award-winning photojournalist Alon Skuy’s latest exhibition A Beautiful Struggle: A Journey Through Post-Apartheid Realities opened in Miami, Florida, this weekend.
Photos of Dylann Roof, the man who killed nine people last week in the Charleston Massacre, surfaced of him wearing flags from apartheid-era South Africa. CNN values your feedback 1.