Thursday, January 7, Born a crime, page 8 reading and choice responses
Trevor Noah and his mother
Your async work for Wednesday was to read several times the South African Immorality Act of 1927.
WARNING!!!! On January 31, all chapters that we have been listening to read by Trevor Noah have been removed from youtube. That means, if you have not been keeping up, the links to the individual chapters are no longer working! You may however access the previous chapters through Born a Crime audio link..access to all chapters
Please read the following and respond two of the questions the four questions that follow in COMPLETE SENTENCES, weaving in text. Remember to use quotation marks. Open up a google doc, copy the question (s) you selected, followed by your well-written response. Share: dorothy.parker@rcsdk12.org or 2006630 This is due by midnight tonight. You have class time.
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The genius of apartheid was convincing people who were the overwhelming majority to turn on each other. Apart hate, is what it was. You separate people into groups and make them hate one another so you can run them all.
At the time, black South Africans outnumbered white South Africans nearly five to one, yet we were divided into different tribes with different languages: Zulu, Xhosa, Tswana, Sotho, Venda, Ndebele, Tsonga, Pedi, and more. Long before apartheid existed these tribal factions clashed and warred with one another. Then white rule used that animosity to divide and conquer. All nonwhites were systematically classified into various groups and subgroups. Then these groups were given differing levels of rights and privileges in order to keep them at odds.
Perhaps the starkest of these divisions was between South Africa’s two dominant groups, the Zulu and the Xhosa. The Zulu man is known as the warrior. He is proud. He puts his head down and fights. When the colonial armies invaded, the Zulu charged into battle with nothing but spears and shields against men with guns. The Zulu were slaughtered by the thousands, but they never stopped fighting. The Xhosa, on the other hand, pride themselves on being the thinkers. My mother is Xhosa. Nelson Mandela was Xhosa. The Xhosa waged a long war against the white man as well, but after experiencing the futility of battle against a better armed foe, many Xhosa chiefs took a more nimble approach. “These white people are here whether we like it or not,” they said. “Let’s see what tools they possess that can be useful to us. Instead of being resistant to English, let’s learn English. We’ll understand what the white man is saying, and we can force him to negotiate with us.”
The Zulu went to war with the white man. The Xhosa played chess with the white man. For a long time neither was particularly successful, and each blamed the other for a problem neither had created. Bitterness festered. For decades those feelings were held in check by a common enemy. Then apartheid fell, Mandela walked free, and black South Africa went to war with itself.
Questions:
1. Why might it be a politcally wise move to set people up against each other?
2. Why under apartheid were groups systematically classified?
3. How did the Zulu people handle the Europeans, in constrast to the Xhosa people?
4. Noah states that with the fall of apartheid,"South Africa went to war with itself?" What does that mean?
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