The teen uprising that changed South Africa forever - BBC What's New
Until 1994 South Africa was ruled by the apartheid system, which almost completely separated white people from the rest of the population. Where black people lived, worked and socialised was strictly controlled - and schools were entirely segregated. But when students were told that they were going to be taught in Afrikaans, a protest started that would change South African history forever. Reporter: André Lombard BBC What’s New and BBC Actu Jeunes are the BBC’s first bilingual programmes for teenagers, brought to you by the BBC World Service to discuss important issues for young people across Africa. BBC Actu Jeunes et BBC What’s New, l’actualité qui parle aux jeunes en Afrique, en français et en anglais. Des émissions du Service Mondial de la BBC. Abonnez-vous ici! Subscribe to #BBCWhatsNew and #BBCActuJeunes here: https://www.youtube.com/c/BBCWhatsNew...

Inside South Africa’s White Slums

Trevor Chats with His Grandma About Apartheid and Tours Her Home, “MTV Cribs”-Style | The Daily Show

INSIDE THE MOST RACIST CITY IN THE WORLD 🇿🇦

The June 16, 1976, Soweto Uprising in South Africa

1500 Years of Russian History in 30 Minutes

South Africa on the Brink of Chaos

South African Apartheid | Student uprising | Tsietsi Mashinini | This week |1976

Louis Theroux: Racism In South Africa | BBC

Südafrika – Eine Stadt nur für Weiße | Doku HD | ARTE

Inside South Africa's Biggest White Slum

The revolution never ends – students remember 1976

How did South African Apartheid happen, and how did it finally end? - Thula Simpson

White Slums of South Africa (Full Reggie Yates Documentary)

South Africa's coloured community: 'Still marginalised after apartheid' - BBC Africa

Nelson Mandela & Apartheid in South Africa Documentary

Elon Musk's Family History in South Africa Reveals Ties to Apartheid & Neo-Nazi Movements

1960s South Africa | Apartheid | Nadine Gordimer | Industry | This Week | 1968

Pretoria: Living in the Land of Apartheid

Why South Africa is still so segregated

