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The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986

In South Africa, there are different terms used to describe so-called different population groups. The official terms used by the apartheid government were Coloured, Indian, White and Natives or Bantu. Coloureds were subdivided into no less than 5 subgroups. Coloureds were also known pejoratively as...

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Main Author: Davy, Kevin J
Other Authors: De Gruchy, John W
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Religious Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Davy, Kevin J
author2 De Gruchy, John W
author_browse Davy, Kevin J
De Gruchy, John W
author_facet De Gruchy, John W
Davy, Kevin J
author_sort Davy, Kevin J
collection Thesis
description In South Africa, there are different terms used to describe so-called different population groups. The official terms used by the apartheid government were Coloured, Indian, White and Natives or Bantu. Coloureds were subdivided into no less than 5 subgroups. Coloureds were also known pejoratively as Hottentots as opposed to the more acceptable, Khoi-Khoi, and Bushmen as opposed to the Khoi San. The term Coloured was not accepted by the majority who fell into this group. Coloureds in their more positive sense can be seen as Africans of mixed ancestry. The term, Indians, referred to South Africans of Indian descent and the term, Whites, collectively described all Africans of European descent. The terms, Natives or Bantu, referred to indigenous Africans, pejoratively called, 'Kaffirs'. With the advent of the Black Consciousness Movement, there was an attempt to challenge this negative classification of all people who were not white. Black Consciousness redefined all oppressed people who were not white as Black. Coloureds Indians and Natives were thus defined as Black. This use of the word Black was meant to be positive to affirm the oppressed masses in South Africa. It was used as a rejection of the term non-white, which defined oppressed people in terms of whiteness. In response to the events of 1976, the apartheid government moved swiftly to counter this attempt to unify the oppressed community under one umbrella, namely Blackness. In order to sew confusion, as well as to once again gain hegemony over oppressed South Africans, they replaced the term Native or Bantu with Black, and continued to use the terms Coloured, Indian and White to describe the other so-called racial groups. In this thesis I will use the tenns coloured, Indian, African, white and apartheid in lower case out of protest against the apartheid classification system. When they appear in quotations in upper case, they will be written within quotation marks. E.g. 'Coloured' The ten coloured will refer to Africans of mixed ancestry. The tenn indian will refer to Africans of Indian descent The tenns 'Black' 'Native' 'Bantu' when referring to indigenous Africans will be replaced by the tenn african in lower case, except in quotations when they will be written in quotation marks. The tenn black will refer to coloureds, Indians and Africans. The tenn Ecumenical Church will refer to the member 'churches of the South African Council of Churches. This includes what is known as the major English-Speaking Churches, such as the Methodist, Congregational, Presbyterian, Lutheran and Anglican Churches. The Ecumenical Church will often be referred to as the Church for short.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38391 The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986 Davy, Kevin J De Gruchy, John W Religious Studies In South Africa, there are different terms used to describe so-called different population groups. The official terms used by the apartheid government were Coloured, Indian, White and Natives or Bantu. Coloureds were subdivided into no less than 5 subgroups. Coloureds were also known pejoratively as Hottentots as opposed to the more acceptable, Khoi-Khoi, and Bushmen as opposed to the Khoi San. The term Coloured was not accepted by the majority who fell into this group. Coloureds in their more positive sense can be seen as Africans of mixed ancestry. The term, Indians, referred to South Africans of Indian descent and the term, Whites, collectively described all Africans of European descent. The terms, Natives or Bantu, referred to indigenous Africans, pejoratively called, 'Kaffirs'. With the advent of the Black Consciousness Movement, there was an attempt to challenge this negative classification of all people who were not white. Black Consciousness redefined all oppressed people who were not white as Black. Coloureds Indians and Natives were thus defined as Black. This use of the word Black was meant to be positive to affirm the oppressed masses in South Africa. It was used as a rejection of the term non-white, which defined oppressed people in terms of whiteness. In response to the events of 1976, the apartheid government moved swiftly to counter this attempt to unify the oppressed community under one umbrella, namely Blackness. In order to sew confusion, as well as to once again gain hegemony over oppressed South Africans, they replaced the term Native or Bantu with Black, and continued to use the terms Coloured, Indian and White to describe the other so-called racial groups. In this thesis I will use the tenns coloured, Indian, African, white and apartheid in lower case out of protest against the apartheid classification system. When they appear in quotations in upper case, they will be written within quotation marks. E.g. 'Coloured' The ten coloured will refer to Africans of mixed ancestry. The tenn indian will refer to Africans of Indian descent The tenns 'Black' 'Native' 'Bantu' when referring to indigenous Africans will be replaced by the tenn african in lower case, except in quotations when they will be written in quotation marks. The tenn black will refer to coloureds, Indians and Africans. The tenn Ecumenical Church will refer to the member 'churches of the South African Council of Churches. This includes what is known as the major English-Speaking Churches, such as the Methodist, Congregational, Presbyterian, Lutheran and Anglican Churches. The Ecumenical Church will often be referred to as the Church for short. 2023-09-05T13:57:33Z 2023-09-05T13:57:33Z 2000 2023-09-05T13:56:28Z Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38391 eng application/pdf Department of Religious Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Religious Studies
Davy, Kevin J
The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986
title_full The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986
title_fullStr The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986
title_full_unstemmed The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986
title_short The role of Coloured church leaders in the anti-apartheid struggle : 16 June 1976-16 June 1986
title_sort role of coloured church leaders in the anti apartheid struggle 16 june 1976 16 june 1986
topic Religious Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38391
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