During apartheid, people were divided into racial groups and kept apart by law. The system was used to deny many rights of non-white people. The laws allowed the white minority to keep the black majority out of certain areas. Black people had to carry special papers (passes) or have permission to live and work in particular areas. The government separated mixed communities and forcibly moved many people. Many laws were made, for example: people of different races were not allowed to get married; black people could not own land; and black people could not vote.
Many countries and the United Nations did not agree with the South African government's policies. There were protests in South Africa, like in Sharpeville in 1960 and in Soweto in 1976. TheSoweto uprising started because Africans were forced to study some subjects at school inAfrikaans. Many black people did not like Afrikaans because it was not the first language of black people, but the language of the apartheid government.
Finally, after much struggle, the South African government ended apartheid in 1994. After that, equal rights were shared among both black and whites. Nelson Mandela stood up to apartheid and became president when apartheid was ended. Although granted equal rights since 1994, 90 percent of the country's poor people are non-white, and so poverty remains a big problem.
Apartheid is an Afrikaans word meaning "separateness".
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