Apartheid

Booklet illustrated with woodcuts about life for black South Africans under apartheid. The booklet was produced by the South Africa Racial Amity Trust (SARAT), an education charity set up by the Anti-Apartheid Movement and later renamed the Bishop Ambrose Reeves Trust (BART).

Apartheid was maintained by an elaborate legal system which institutionalised the violence implicit in South African society. This pamphlet sets out facts and figures about the punitive apparatus behind the operation of apartheid and describes the conditions endured by convicted prisoners and detainees held without charge. It was written by Albie Sachs for the International Defence and Aid Fund (IDAF) and distributed by the Anti-Apartheid Movement.

This poster was one of a series about repression under apartheid. It featured South African exile Jan Hoogendyk dressed as a South African policeman. The 1967 Terrorism Act gave the police power to detain people indefinitely without disclosing where they were being held. At least 15 prisoners died in detention in the first few years of the Act.

Pamphlet documenting the use of torture in South Africa in the 1960s and 1970s. The pamphlet shows how the apartheid legal system was used as window-dressing for a totalitarian regime and covers key trials in the early 1970s, including that of Winnie Mandela. It was published by the International Defence and Aid Fund (IDAF) and distributed by the Anti-Apartheid Movement.

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