South Africa: The Rise And Fall Of Apartheid May 2026

: Thousands of students protested the mandatory use of Afrikaans in schools. The brutal police response, which killed hundreds, drew intense international condemnation and sparked a new wave of internal militancy. The Fall of Apartheid (1980s–1994)

While formal apartheid ended with the 1994 elections and the adoption of a new constitution in 1996, its legacy persists. South Africa remains one of the most unequal countries in the world, with significant disparities in wealth, land ownership, and access to quality education still largely following racial lines. South Africa: The Rise and Fall of Apartheid

Apartheid (meaning "apartness" in Afrikaans ) was a formal system of institutionalized racial segregation and white minority rule in South Africa that lasted from . While racial discrimination existed in South Africa for centuries under Dutch and British colonial rule, the 1948 election of the National Party (NP) codified these practices into rigid, all-encompassing laws. The Rise of Apartheid (1948–1960s) : Thousands of students protested the mandatory use