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The Importance of Diversity


Article # : 12511 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1987  2,869 Words
Author : John S. Nettles

       There is no system or policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination on the face of the earth that can be equated to that of the Republic of South Africa. The system of apartheid is the most damnable exemplification of inhumanity anywhere. The implementation of this system has made it possible for the 30 percent of the population that is white to suppress the 70 percent of the population that is black. The cruelties, inequities, and violence utilized by the ruling minority over a period of years have set the stage for what many observers predict will be a catastrophic bloodbath if substantive power-sharing is not effectuated in the very near future.
       
        There are both similarities and dissimilarities in blacks' quest for full citizenship in America and in South Africa.
       
        Though laws of segregation were operative in America prior to the 1960s, particularly in the South, and though black protesters were often harassed beaten, jailed, and even killed by state troopers, county sheriffs, and local police, blacks were inherently protected by the Constitution of the United States. These laws afforded blacks the protection of the federal government in their quest for full citizenship. This was evidenced by the Supreme Court's decision outlawing so-called separate but equal schools in the Brown vs. Board of Education case in 1954 and the same court's decision outlawing segregation of public transportation in 1957. This case emanated from the Montgomery bus boycott led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., which galvanized the modern civil rights movement in America. These guaranteed rights and protections were often evidenced at the point of bayonets. In cases such as the protection of the Little Rock Nine, the federal government ensured the protection of students attempting to integrate the University of Arkansas when 101st Airborne troops were dispatched by the president. Similar federal efforts took place in the states of Alabama and Mississippi. In addition, countless civil rights cases were won in federal courts throughout the nation.
       
        Joseph E. Lowry, president of the Southern Christian Leadership conference (SCLC), believes that in America a national consciousness of the majority opposed legalized segregation. Segregation to a degree was an embarrassment to America as the world watched.
       
        None of these factors exists in South Africa. To begin with, the constitution sanctions segregation. It is designed and structured to give rights to "whites only." Despite the rhetoric of inclusion of blacks in government, blacks remain excluded from power-sharing on the central level. The overwhelming violence heaped upon blacks in South Africa is being perpetrated by the government.
       
        Thousands of children are detained in prisons throughout South Africa by the national government. Others have been beaten, and an astronomical number of blacks have been killed by the government.
       
        There is no national consciousness to which to appeal. What redress do a people have when they live under a repressive regime of their own government?
       
        As King said:
       
        Let us never succumb to the temptation of believing that legislation and judicial decrees play only
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