Some 1971 tour players, from left, Hira Dhiraj, Hoosen Bobat, a Dutch friend, Jasmat Dhiraj, Charmaine Williams and Oscar Woodman. Williams toured at her own expense.
Courtesy the 1971 players/UKZN Press
A new book delves into the issues faced by a 1971 international tennis tour, and calls for injustice to be recognised.
There are more black African academic staff at South African universities than before.
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Despite some positive shifts, the staffing situation at public higher education institutions remains polarised in terms of race and gender.
A still from the documentary about growing up in South Africa.
Milisuthando/Rob Pollock/Francis Burger
Opening the Encounters documentary festival in South Africa, the film has received international praise.
Detail of a photo of Frank Anthony (front left) on Robben Island with Walter Sisulu (front right).
© Unknown/Courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation
The activist and writer has been erased from South Africa’s history - but new academic work seeks to restore his voice.
The late South African mining tycoon, Harry Oppenheimer.
Harry Frederick Oppenheimer in his Johannesburg office. (Photo by William Campbell/Sygma via Getty Images
Regarding himself heir to Cecil Rhodes, Oppenheimer deplored the threat to civilisation represented by ‘primitive tribesmen’.
Chris Hani (R) after being elected secretary general of the South African Communist Party in December 1991. To his left is the former secretary general Jo Slovo.
Walter Dhladhla/AFP via Getty Images
The book is a gripping read for anyone interested in late 20th century history, and in the end of apartheid.
Wikimedia Commons
Some media and politicians have been comparing the First Nations Voice to Parliament to apartheid. However, ensuring First Nations peoples have their views heard by parliament is not the same thing.
Nelson Mandela and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela at home in 1990.
Robert Botha/Business Day/Gallo Images via Getty Images
Jonny Steinberg talks about his intimate double biography of the famous South African leaders.
An illustration of an antique photograph of the British Empire’s mission work among the Zulu people of then-Natal province.
ilbusca/DigitalVision Vectors/Getty Images
Missionaries and African translators working on local versions of the Bible divided South Africa’s ethnic groups by language.
The late Sathima Bea Benjamin, jazz singer and composer, has a track on As-Shams Archive Volume 1.
Jack Vartoogian/Getty Images
The legendary As-Shams jazz label has released the first of several compilation albums recovered from its archive.
A holocaust survivor who also witnessed apartheid, Ruth Weiss will receive national honours.
Oliver Berg/picture alliance via Getty Images
Weiss witnessed atrocities in Germany and South Africa and railed against them, becoming a towering figure as a writer and poet.
29 years of democracy has left its mark.
Rather battered and frayed South African flag billowing in the wind against a cloud-strewn sky.
A threshold has been crossed, with a pessimistic outlook becoming more dominant than an optimistic one.
shutterstock.
Most farmworkers were not even aware that the farm they worked on was Fairtrade certified.
Begging is a strategy often used by homeless people.
Fati Moalusi/AFP via Getty Images
Food insecurity remains a major health problem. And poorer households are disproportionately affected.
Palestinians carry the body of a man who was killed during an Israeli military raid in the West Bank city of Jenin in March 2023.
(AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)
Israelis are justifiably opposing reforms to the country’s judicial system that would erode their human rights. But what about the human rights of Palestinians?
Richard Drury/Getty Images
Fifty years ago the council was created to fight for marginalised communities to participate fairly in sports. Their dream remains unfulfilled.
Noni Jabavu at her London office, 12th September 1961.
Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
These columns demonstrate that Noni Jabavu’s concerns from 1970s are still relevant today.
Anti-apartheid activist Neil Aggett (29) died in apartheid police detention in 1982.
Charcoal on paper by Dr Amitabh Mitra/Wiki Commons
Neil Agget’s passionate trade unionism proved fateful. It made him a target of a brutally repressive apartheid police state.
Marco Cappelletti/OMA/Islamic Arts Biennale
The celebrated South African architect Sumayya Vally is the artistic director of the exhibition.
President Carter’s interest in southern Africa was crucial to keeping the peace.
Wikimedia Commons/Flickr
Carter’s work in Zimbabwe forms a significant and under appreciated part of his legacy