Apartheid in a sentence as a noun

Clearly, in SA the apartheid regime was central to the concept of the citizens of SA.

" Pik Botha was one of the hardest apartheid officials, he held out until the end and wanted war. Source below.

The US was actively opposing apartheid at the same time as the ANC was added to the watch list, during the Reagan administration.

"Men who go into technical fields suffer serious scars from social rejection that's every bit as painful as apartheid.

But it also hasn't been the bloodbath many who lived there expected it to become on the fall of apartheid - and Mandela bears a huge portion of the credit for this

The Berlin wall fell in 1989, removing the "bulwark against communism" rationale for US support of apartheid, and Mandela was released from jail in 1990.

The results of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission clearly indicate evilness of the apartheid regime and those in control of it.

If they just calmly told their oppressors that they were being racist and offensive, they would stop!This totally explains away the entirety of slavery and apartheid.

!> Men who go into technical fields suffer serious scars from social rejection that's every bit as painful as apartheidLacking social skills makes one a victim of a crime against humanity?

> Reagan has a weird relationship with apartheidIf by "weird relationship" you mean "supported it", then yes. Reagan was an out-and-out racist *******, whose pro-apartheid policies were so extreme that his own party, despite itself being a party filled with racist *****, nonetheless felt a need to override his veto to try to distance themselves from his over-the-top level of extremism.

An unfortunate turn of phrase, but it's not about pacifist white washing... his release from prison was into a society where apartheid had yet to be removed and he advocated that in many circumstances people need to use force to defend themselves against oppression for most of his life.

Apartheid definitions

noun

a social policy or racial segregation involving political and economic and legal discrimination against people who are not Whites; the former official policy in South Africa