International Solidarity Movement
Video Interviews
"[anti-apartheid demonstrations] have helped to boost the morale of the victims of apartheid..."
Video interview segment with Desmond Tutu [1:30]
January 15, 1986 Detroit, Michigan, United States. From American Black Journal
Video interview segment with Desmond Tutu [1:30]
January 15, 1986 Detroit, Michigan, United States. From American Black Journal
"We have had many, many people suddenly grow wonderfully altruistic and tell us that they..."
Video interview segment with Desmond Tutu [1:28]
January 15, 1986 Detroit, Michigan, United States. From American Black Journal
Video interview segment with Desmond Tutu [1:28]
January 15, 1986 Detroit, Michigan, United States. From American Black Journal
"It had to be a white person living in a shack, because it would not have had the same impact if it were me." Video interview segment with Ben Magubane [1:08]
October 11, 2004 Durban, South Africa.
"I remember the Coke boycott ... to encourage Coke to divest from South Africa" Video interview segment with Kgati Sathekge [1:29]
May 16, 2006 Pretoria, South Africa.
..."the effectiveness of the work that we've done has often been based on how much it could be linked to people's lives and their issues in the United States." Video interview segment with Prexy Nesbitt [3:22]
October 12, 2004 Durban, South Africa.
I think it's one of the achievements of the [anti-apartheid] movement that, in the end, it represents one of the better moments of inter-racial work in the United States. Video interview segment with Prexy Nesbitt [3:37]
October 12, 2004 Durban, South Africa.
"It would be a wrong interpretation of history if we ignored the role of the international community in our struggle." Video interview segment with Ahmed Kathrada [3:39]
March 24, 2006 East Lansing, Michigan, United States.
"One of the legs of the struggle that liberated our country was mobilization of international opinion." Video interview segment with Renfrew Christie [1:03]
May 27, 2005 Cape Town, South Africa.
Images
Documents
Historical Document: End all Sports Ties with South Africa
By American Coordinating Committee for Equality in Sport & Society (ACCESS) 1977
By American Coordinating Committee for Equality in Sport & Society (ACCESS) 1977
Summary
Social change normally is the result of an accumulation of forces, and this was the case with the ending of apartheid in South Africa. Of course, the most significant force for change were the many South Africans who organized against the minority regime or refused to comply with its myriad oppressive laws, using a changing combination of tactics over time. International allies supported the South African struggle for freedom and democracy, as people around the world responded to the Defiance Campaign in the 1950s; the Sharpeville Massacre, banning of the African National Congress and Pan Africanist Congress, and Rivonia Trial in the 1960s; the student uprising in the mid-1970s; the death of Steve Biko and banning of Black Consciousness Movement organizations in 1977; and the formation of the United Democratic Front, the increased state violence during State of Emergency, and the campaign for the release of Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners in the 1980s.Support from the African frontline states was crucial, and it came at great human and economic costs. The Soviet Union and Cuba provided support for the armed struggle, after the liberation movements’ requests for assistance from the West were rejected by the United States and other governments that saw white-controlled South Africa as a Cold War ally and a source of strategic minerals. Scandinavian countries provided considerable support to the freedom movement. And anti-apartheid movements in Europe, the United States, Australia and New Zealand took action in many arenas – lobbying their governments for sanctions against South Africa, conducting sports and cultural boycotts, and mobilizing direct support for the liberation movements. The U.S. Congress’ adoption of economic sanctions over President Ronald Reagan’s veto in 1986 was an important signal to the apartheid government that it could no longer rely on support from the West and it should begin negotiations with the liberation movements.
Related Multimedia Resources:
Web Images
Political Art: "Chase Manhattan - Partner in Apartheid" 1965
From: African Activist Archive
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From: African Activist Archive
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Political Art: "SS - Sharpeville Massacre Tenth Anniversary" 1970 ?
From: Posters from the Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies of Northwestern University
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From: Posters from the Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies of Northwestern University
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Political Art: "Free South Africa - End Apartheid" From: African Activist Archive
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Political Art: "Free Mayekiso" 1988
From: African Activist Archive
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From: African Activist Archive
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Political Art: "Free Mandela" From: African Activist Archive
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Recommended Websites
Nordic Africa Institute Nordic Documentation on the Liberation Struggle in Southern Africa
[more info]
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Posters from the Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies of Northwestern University
[more info]
[Go to source directly and leave this site]
[more info]
[Go to source directly and leave this site]
Suggested Reading
No Easy Victories: African Liberation and American Activists over a Half Century, 1950-2000
By Charles Cobb Jr., Gail Hovey, William Minter 2007
[more info]
By Charles Cobb Jr., Gail Hovey, William Minter 2007
[more info]



