- ZA HPRA A3440-B-B1-B1.14
- Part
- 1967
The images cover one of Apartheid's cruelest punishments - the banishment of people to the remotest and poorest areas, where they were left to their own demise.
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The images cover one of Apartheid's cruelest punishments - the banishment of people to the remotest and poorest areas, where they were left to their own demise.
Newspaper clips; notes; typescript. Also included a manuscript entitled "The Banished", page 1-37, no author, possibly 1965, with red footnotes referring to Hansards, Rand Daily Mail and Race Relations News.
Municipalities legally monopolize production and sale of this brew; profits are high. In Government beer halls (where women are not allowed), it is dispensed automatically from huge vats.
Municipalities legally monopolize production and sale of this brew; profits are high. In Government beer halls (where women are not allowed), it is dispensed automatically from huge vats.
Bantu beer cartons outside bottle store
Friday afternoon outside the bottle store, after most of crowd have left.
Folder empty.
Young woman in pain waits her turn in emergency room of Baragwanath Hospital.
Barracks-like buildings are divided into starkly simple rooms with bunk space for twenty men. There are no closets or cupboards, so clothes and boots hang all over.
The chapter contains images documenting Africans' lives, many of which are marked by hunger, desperation and poverty .
"Penny, baas, please, baas, I hungry..." This plaint is part of nightly scene in the golden City, as black boys beg from whites. They may be thrown a coin, or, as here, they may get slapped in the face.