The Soweto uprising, also known as the Soweto riots, was a series of demonstrations and protests led by black school children in South Africa during apartheid that began on the morning of 16 June 1976.[1]

Soweto uprising
Part of apartheid
Hector Pieterson being carried by Mbuyisa Makhubo after being shot by the South African police. His sister, Antoinette Sithole, runs beside them. Pieterson was rushed to a local clinic where he was declared dead on arrival. This photo by Sam Nzima became an icon of the Soweto uprising.
LocationSoweto, South Africa
Date16–18 June 1976
DeathsMinimum of 176 with some estimates ranging up to 700
Injured1,000+
VictimsStudents
Assailants South African Police

Students from various schools began to protest in the streets of the Soweto township in response to the introduction of Afrikaans, considered by many blacks as the "language of the oppressor", as the medium of instruction in black schools.[2] It is estimated that 20,000 students took part in the protests. They were met with fierce police brutality, and many were shot and killed. The number of pupils killed in the uprising is usually estimated as 176, but some sources estimate as many as 700 fatalities.[3][4][5] The riots were a key moment in the fight against apartheid as it sparked renewed opposition against apartheid in South Africa both domestically and internationally. In remembrance of these events, 16 June is a public holiday in South Africa, named Youth Day. Internationally, 16 June is known as The Day of the African Child (DAC).[6][7]

Causes

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Black South African high school students in Soweto protested against the Afrikaans Medium Decree of 1974, which forced all black schools to use Afrikaans and English in equal terms as languages of instruction.[8] The association of Afrikaans with apartheid prompted black South Africans to prefer English. Even the Bantustan regimes chose English and an indigenous African language as official languages. In addition, English was gaining prominence as the language most often used in commerce and industry. The 1974 decree was intended to force the reverse of the decline of Afrikaans among black Africans. The Afrikaner-dominated government used the clause of the 1909 Union of South Africa Act that recognised only English and Dutch, the latter being replaced by Afrikaans in 1925, as official languages as its pretext.[9] All schools had to provide instruction in both Afrikaans and English as languages, but white South African students learned other subjects in their home language.

The Regional Director of Bantu Education (Northern Transvaal Region), J.G. Erasmus, told Circuit Inspectors and Principals of Schools that from 1 January 1975, Afrikaans had to be used for mathematics, arithmetic, and social studies from standard five (7th grade), according to the Afrikaans Medium Decree. English would be the medium of instruction for general science and practical subjects (homecraft, needlework, woodwork, metalwork, art, agricultural science).[8] Indigenous languages would be used only for religious instruction, music, and physical culture.[10]

The decree was resented deeply by the black population. Desmond Tutu, the bishop of Lesotho, stated that Afrikaans was "the language of the oppressor."[citation needed] Also, teacher organizations, such as the African Teachers Association of South Africa, objected to the decree.[11]

Punt Janson, the Deputy Minister of Bantu Education, was quoted as saying: "A Black man may be trained to work on a farm or in a factory. He may work for an employer who is either English-speaking or Afrikaans-speaking and the man who has to give him instructions may be either English-speaking or Afrikaans-speaking. Why should we now start quarrelling about the medium of instruction among the Black people as well?... No, I have not consulted them and I am not going to consult them. I have consulted the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa...."[12]

A change in language of instruction forced the students to focus on understanding the language, instead of the subject material. That made critical analysis of the content difficult and discouraged critical thinking.[13]

The resentment grew until 30 April 1976, when children at Orlando West Junior School in Soweto went on strike and refused to go to school. Their rebellion then spread to many other schools in Soweto. Black South African students protested because they believed that they deserved to be treated and taught like white South Africans. Also, very few people in Soweto spoke Afrikaans. A student from Morris Isaacson High School, Teboho "Tsietsi" Mashinini, proposed a meeting on 13 June 1976 to discuss what should be done. Students formed an Action Committee, later known as the Soweto Students' Representative Council,[14] which organised a mass rally for 16 June to make themselves heard.[8]

Uprising

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On the morning of 16 June 1976, between 3,000 and 20,000[15][16] black students walked from their schools to Orlando Stadium for a rally to protest having to learn in Afrikaans in school. Many students who later participated in the protest arrived at schools that morning without prior knowledge of the protest but agreed to become involved. The protest was planned by the Soweto Students' Representative Council's (SSRC) Action Committee,[17] with support from the wider Black Consciousness Movement. Teachers in Soweto also supported the march after the Action Committee emphasized good discipline and peaceful actions.

Tsietsi Mashinini led students from Morris Isaacson High School to join up with others who walked from Naledi High School.[18] The students began the march, only to find out that police had barricaded the road along their intended route. The leader of the action committee asked the crowd not to provoke the police, and the march continued on another route and eventually ended up near Orlando High School.[19] The crowd of between 3,000 and 10,000 students made its way towards the area of the school. Students sang and waved placards with slogans such as, "Down with Afrikaans", "Viva Azania" and "If we must do Afrikaans, Vorster must do Zulu".[20]

The police set their trained dog on the protesters, who responded by killing it.[21] The police then began to shoot directly at the children.

Among the first students to be shot dead were the 15-year-old Hastings Ndlovu and the 12-year-old Hector Pieterson, who were shot at Orlando West High School.[22] The photographer Sam Nzima took a photograph of a dying Hector Pieterson as he was carried away by Mbuyisa Makhubo and accompanied by his sister, Antoinette Peterson, which became the symbol of the Soweto uprising. The police attacks on the demonstrators continued, and 23 people died on the first day in Soweto. Among them was Melville Edelstein. He was stoned to death by the mob and left with a sign around his neck proclaiming, "Beware Afrikaans is the most dangerous drug for our future".[23]

The violence escalated, as bottle stores and beer halls, seen as outposts of the apartheid government, were targeted, as were the official outposts of the state. The violence had abated by nightfall. Police vans and armoured vehicles patrolled the streets throughout the night.

Emergency clinics were swamped with injured and bloody children. The police requested for the hospital to provide a list of all victims with bullet wounds to prosecute them for rioting. The hospital administrator passed the request to the doctors, but the doctors refused to create the list. The Doctors recorded bullet wounds as abscesses.[14][22]

1,500 armed police officers were deployed to Soweto on 17 June carrying weapons, including automatic rifles, stun guns, and carbines.[14] They drove around in armoured vehicles with helicopters monitoring the area from above. The South African Army was also ordered on standby as a tactical measure to show military force. Crowd control methods used by South African police at the time included mainly dispersement techniques. Hundreds of people were arrested, including activist Connie Mofokeng, who was tortured for information.[24]

Casualties and aftermath

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The number of people who died is usually given as 176, with estimates up to 700.[4] The original government figure claimed only 23 students were killed,[25] with the number of wounded estimated to be over 1,000 people. Black students also killed two white people during the uprising, one of them Melville Edelstein.[26][27][28]

The clashes occurred while the South African government was being forced to "transform" apartheid in international eyes towards a more "benign" form. In October 1976, Transkei, the first Bantustan, was proclaimed "independent" by the government. That attempt to showcase supposed South African "commitment" to self-determination backfired, however, since Transkei was internationally derided as a puppet state.

For the government, the uprising marked the most fundamental challenge yet to apartheid. The economic and political instability that it caused was heightened by the strengthening international boycott. It would be 14 years before Nelson Mandela was released, but the state could never restore the relative peace and social stability of the early 1970s, as black resistance grew. The liberation movements that were either weakened or exiled gained new momentum as a surge of recruits joined.

Many white South Africans were outraged at the government's actions in Soweto. The day after the massacre, about 400 white students from the University of the Witwatersrand marched through Johannesburg's city centre in protest of the killing of children.[29] Black workers went on strike as well and joined them as the campaign progressed. Riots also broke out in the black townships of other cities in South Africa.

Student organisations directed the energy and anger of the youth toward political resistance. Students in Thembisa organised a successful and nonviolent solidarity march, but a similar protest held in Kagiso led to police stopping a group of participants, forcing them to retreat, and killing at least five people while reinforcements were awaited. The violence died down only on 18 June. The University of Zululand's records and administration buildings were set ablaze, and 33 people died in incidents in Port Elizabeth in August. In Cape Town, 92 people died between August and September.

Most of the bloodshed had abated by the end of 1976, when the death toll had stood at more than 600.

The continued clashes in Soweto caused economic instability. The South African rand devalued fast, and the government was plunged into a crisis.

The African National Congress printed and distributed leaflets with the slogan "Free Mandela, Hang Vorster". It immediately linked the language issue to its revolutionary heritage and programme and helped to establish its leading role. (See Baruch Hirson's "Year of Fire, Year of Ash", for a discussion of the ANC's ability to channel and direct the popular anger.")

The Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum opened in Soweto in 2002, not far from the spot that the 12-year-old Hector was shot on the 16 June 1976.[30]

International reactions

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The UN Security Council passed Resolution 392, which strongly condemned the incident and the apartheid government.[31]

A week after the uprising began, US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger met South African State President Vorster in West Germany to discuss the situation in Rhodesia, but the Soweto uprising did not feature in the discussions.[32] Kissinger and Vorster met again in Pretoria in September 1976, with students in Soweto and elsewhere protesting his visit and being fired on by police.[33]

1986 massacre

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On the night of 26 August 1986, the police opened fire on a demonstration in the White City locale. They killed between 20 and 25 people, possibly more, and wounded over 60. The South African government officially claimed that 11 people had died but later raised the figure to 12. The South African Information Bureau claimed that police opened fire on two occasions, one after a grenade had been tossed at police and wounded four policemen. Residents said that the fighting started when local officials sought to evict tenants who had been refusing to pay their rents for two months as part of a mass boycott. Security forces were said to have initially used tear gas to disperse crowds. Later, a resident telephoned a reporter to say, "The police are shooting left and right. They just shot an old man. They are shooting at everyone, everything".[34]

The UDF leader Frank Chikane described the police actions "as if entering enemy territory, with guns blazing." Minister of Information Louis Nel later came under fire for stating at a press conference, "Let there be no misunderstanding regarding the real issue at stake. It is not the rental issue, it is not the presence of security forces in black residential areas, it is not certain remembrance days, it is not school programs. The violent overthrow of the South African state is the issue."[35]

As retaliation, a black town councilor was killed the following day, hacked to death by a mob. On September 4, police filled a stadium with tear gas to stop a mass funeral for a number of the victims, swept through Soweto and broke up other services being held, including one at Regina Mundi Roman Catholic, where tear gas canisters were thrown into a bus containing mourners. A service at Avalon Cemetery at which thousands were reported to have gathered was also dispersed with tear gas and armored vehicles. Tear gas was also reported to have been dropped from helicopters on processions and crowds.[36]

In media

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Images of the riots spread all over the world and shocked millions. The photograph of Hector Pieterson's dead body, as captured by the photojournalist Sam Nzima, caused outrage and brought down international condemnation on the apartheid government.

The Soweto riots were depicted in the 1987 film by the director Richard Attenborough, Cry Freedom and in the 1992 musical film Sarafina! and the musical production of the same name by Mbongeni Ngema. The riots also inspired the novel A Dry White Season by Andre Brink and a 1989 movie of the same title.

The uprising also featured in the 2003 film Stander about the notorious bank robber and former police captain Andre Stander. The lyrics of the song "Soweto Blues" by Hugh Masekela and Miriam Makeba describe the Soweto Uprising and the children's part in it.[37]

Radio

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In June 1996, the Ulwazi Educational Radio Project of Johannesburg compiled an hour-long radio documentary 20 years after the uprising portraying the events of 16 June entirely from the perspective of people living in Soweto at the time.[38] Many of the students who planned or joined the uprising, as well as other witnesses, took part, including the photographer Peter Magubane, the reporter Sophie Tema and Tim Wilson, the white doctor who pronounced Pieterson dead in Baragwanath Hospital. The programme was broadcast on SABC and on a number of local radio stations throughout South Africa. The following year, BBC Radio 4 and BBC World Service broadcast a revised version containing fresh interviews, The Day Apartheid Died.[39]

The programme was runner-up at the 1998 European Community Humanitarian Office (ECHO) TV & Radio Awards and also at the 1998 Media Awards of the One World International Broadcasting Trust and was highly commended at the 1998 Prix Italia radio awards. In May 1999, it was rebroadcast by BBC Radio 4 as The Death of Apartheid with a fresh introduction that provided added historical context for a British audience by Anthony Sampson, a former editor of Drum magazine and the author of the authorised biography (1999) of Nelson Mandela. Sampson linked extracts from the BBC Sound Archive that charted the long struggle against apartheid from the Sharpeville massacre of 1960 to the riots of 1976 and the murder of Steve Biko until Mandela's release from prison in 1990 and the future president's speech in which he acknowledged the debt owed by all black South Africans to the students who had given their lives in Soweto on 16 June 1976.[40]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The birth and death of apartheid". Retrieved 17 June 2002.
  2. ^ "The Youth Struggle". South African History Online.
  3. ^ Boddy-Evans, Alistair. "16 June 1976 Student Uprising in Soweto". africanhistory.about.com.
  4. ^ a b Harrison, David (1987). The White Tribe of Africa.[page needed]
  5. ^ (Les Payne of Newsday said at least 850 murders were documented) Elsabe Brink; Gandhi Malungane; Steve Lebelo; Dumisani Ntshangase; Sue Krige, Soweto 16 June 1976, 2001, 9
  6. ^ "About Day of the African Child | ACERWC - African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child". www.acerwc.africa. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  7. ^ "The Day of the African Child demonstrates the importance of defending children's rights in the digital space". www.unicef.org. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  8. ^ a b c Sifiso Mxolisi Ndlovu. "The Soweto Uprising". The Road to Democracy in South Africa (PDF). Vol. 2. South African Democracy Education Trust. p. 327. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  9. ^ Giliomee, Hermann (2003), The Rise and Possible Demise of Afrikaans as a Public Language (PDF), Cape Town: PRAESA, archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2015, retrieved 17 March 2013
  10. ^ Alistair Boddy-Evans. "The Afrikaans Medium Decree". About.
  11. ^ The Youth Struggle,"The 1976 Students' Revolt". South African History Online.
  12. ^ Sifiso Mxolisi Ndlovu. "The Soweto Uprising". The Road to Democracy in South Africa (PDF). Vol. 2. South African Democracy Education Trust. pp. 331–32. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  13. ^ Sifiso Mxolisi Ndlovu. "The Soweto Uprising". The Road to Democracy in South Africa (PDF). Vol. 2. South African Democracy Education Trust. pp. 327–328. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  14. ^ a b c "The 1976 Students' Revolt". South African History Online.
  15. ^ "The June 16 Soweto Youth Uprising | South African History Online". www.sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  16. ^ Allen, John (2006). Rabble-Rouser For Peace. ISBN 9780743269377.
  17. ^ "The Soweto uprising 1976". socialistworld.net. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013.
  18. ^ Davie, Lucille (12 June 2006). "The homecoming that wasn't". City of Johannesburg. Johannesburg News Agency. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  19. ^ Davie, Lucille (23 May 2006). "Soweto's red brick route to 16 June 1976". City of Johannesburg. Johannesburg News Agency. Archived from the original on 7 October 2006. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  20. ^ F.I.J. van Rensburg. "Soweto, 1976: 'n Inklusiewe herbegin 30 jaar later?" (in Afrikaans). Die Vrye Afrikaan.
  21. ^ "Policemen involved in June 16 Shootings have to Explain: Morobe". SAPA. 23 July 1996. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  22. ^ a b Sifiso Mxolisi Ndlovu. "The Soweto Uprising". The Road to Democracy in South Africa (PDF). Vol. 2. South African Democracy Education Trust. p. 344. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  23. ^ Colin Martin Tatz; Peter Arnold; Gillian Heller (2007). Worlds apart: the re-migration of South African Jews. Rosenberg Publishing. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-877058-35-6.
  24. ^ "Connie Mofokeng | South African History Online". www.sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  25. ^ April Francis; Vanessa Marchese. "Apartheid South Africa and the Soweto Rebellion" (PDF). hofstra.edu. Hofstra University. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 June 2024. Retrieved 23 June 2024.
  26. ^ "SAPA - 23 Jul 96 - Truth Body Wraps Up June 16 Hearing in Soweto". www.justice.gov.za. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  27. ^ "16 June '76 – Remember Dr Melville Edelstein – the life & death of a good man | Kevin Harris Productions". www.kevinharris.co.za. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  28. ^ "Dr. Melville Edelstein and South Africa's 1976 Soweto uprising". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  29. ^ Hirson, Baruch (1979). Year of Fire, Year of Ash. The Soweto Revolt: Roots of a Revolution. Zed. p. 185. ISBN 0905762282.
  30. ^ "Hector Pieterson Museum in Gauteng". www.sa-venues.com. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  31. ^ "Resolution 392(1976) of 19 June 1976". Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  32. ^ Mitchell, Nancy (2016). Jimmy Carter in Africa: Race and the Cold War. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804793858.
  33. ^ "Talks opened by Kissinger as riots flare". The Spokesman – Review. 18 September 1976.
  34. ^ Cowell, Alan (27 August 1986). "11 REPORTED SLAIN AND 62 WOUNDED IN SOWETO BATTLE". New York Times.
  35. ^ "ABC New Nightline August 28, 1986". ABC News. 28 August 1986.[dead YouTube link]
  36. ^ Crary, David (4 September 1986). "Security Forces Stop Funeral, Sweep Through Soweto". AP.
  37. ^ Cheyney, Tom (1 March 1990). "Miriam Makeba Welela". Musician (137): 84.
  38. ^ The producers of this documentary included Keketso Semoko, Jeffrey Molawa, Moferefere Lekorotsoana and Andrew Ntsele of Ulwazi, working together with Peter Griffiths of BBC Radio 4.
  39. ^ Extra material collected by Peter Griffiths and Andrew Ntsele of the Ulwazi Educational Radio Project
  40. ^ All details from Peter Griffiths of BBC Radio 4 in London

Sources

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  • Baines, Gary. "The Master Narrative of South Africa's Liberation Struggle: Remembering and Forgetting 16 June 1976, International Journal of African Historical Studies (2007) 40#2 pp. 283–302 in JSTOR
  • Brewer, John D. After Soweto: an unfinished journey (Oxford University Press, 1986)
  • Hirson, Baruch. "Year of Fire, Year of Ash. The Soweto Revolt: Roots of a Revolution?" (Zed Books, 1979)
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External audio
  Guardian Unlimited audio recording of Antoinette Sithole on the Soweto uprising
External videos
  Soweto Uprising (2007) at the Internet Archive
  BBC video of the Soweto uprisings
  TIME 100 Photos: Soweto Uprising: The Story Behind Sam Nzima's Photograph