Mayibuye Uprising
The Mayibuye Uprising was a sequence of protests and demonstrations, led by the African National Congress, South African Indian Congress and the African People's Organisation that took place around No.2 Location Galeshewe, in Kimberley, on 7–8 November 1952. The uprising was not an isolated event, but part of the Defiance Campaign which started in June 1952. The aim of the campaign was to peacefully defy the laws of the apartheid government across the country.
Cause of the uprising
The uprising came in reaction to some of the laws put in place by the National Party, which ruled from 1948–1994. These laws were deemed unjust and inhumane by numerous members of the community and thus, as part of the Defiance Campaign in Kimberley Dr Arthur Letele, who was the ANC branch chairperson of the No.2 Location, organized a group of volunteers to defy the apartheid laws.Some of the laws under protest included:
- The Native Labour Regulation Act 1911, which resulted in the movement and remuneration control of the African that essentially established migrant labour and an average standard wage.
- The 1913 Native Land Act was passed to allocate only about 7% of arable land to Africans and leave the more fertile land for whites. This law incorporated territorial segregation into legislation for the first time since Union in 1910.
- The Population Registration Act of 1950, which required each inhabitant of South Africa to be classified and registered in accordance with his/her racial characteristics as part of the system of apartheid.
- The Group Areas Act 1950, which assigned racial groups to different residential and business sections in the white-dominated urban areas.
- The Pass Laws Act of 1952, which stipulated that all people of colour should carry a passbook at all times when outside their designated homelands.