Statement by the Polaroid Revolutionary Workers Movement

A Student’s Guide to Essential Primary Sources
Table of Contents
Statement by the PolaroidRevolutionary Workers Movement
Overview
Document Text

  You don't have access to this content. Please try to log in with your institution. Sign In

Abstract

In 1948, South Africa saw the rise of the National Party, which sought to create a predominantly white government in a country where whites were the minority. To do this, they passed a series of laws that were aimed at limiting the rights and freedoms of Blacks in South Africa; this program became known as apartheid (derived from the Afrikaans word “apart”) and would remain in effect until 1994. African Americans found themselves feeling a strong kinship to the South African struggle for equality as they were still fighting a battle to gain a semblance of equality in America as well, despite the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Contents