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Blog :: Soweto

Soweto Uprisings . com: Phase 3

Antoinette Sithole Memorial

Phase 3 of the Hector Pieterson Research Project has just got underway. The focus of this latest phase of research is the completion of the school routes related to the Soweto uprisings of 1976. This work coincides with the annual June 16 activities at the Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum.

For more information please visit the project website.

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soweto uprisings . com


Soweto uprisings . com is an online mapping application which maps the routes of the Soweto uprisings. The application is presented by the Hector Pieterson Research Project and is a creation of Ismail Farouk and Babak Fakhamzadeh. Soweto uprisings . com maps the various routes of the Soweto uprisings by geotagging their locations using satellite aerial imagery from Google Maps and digital photographs hosted at Flickr.com. It also returns relevant Google Blogsearch results, Wikipedia articles and other website material geotagged in the Soweto area. The content loads dynamically from these external sources and the site is continually evolving in its quest to readdress conflicting interpretations and mainstream historys tendency to distil events into a single narrative.

For more information please visit:
http://www.sowetouprisings.com

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We Cannot Continue To Die Like This



A movie by:
Babak Fakhamzadeh and Ismail Farouk


Avalon Cemetery is one of the largest cemeteries in South Africa and is the final resting place of many political and cultural activists. The cemetery is about 170ha in size and is managed by the City of Johannesburg’s City Parks division. At the entrance to the cemetery, a memorial with the words, "Never Never Again" inscribed on it pays tribute to those who lost their lives in the Soweto uprisings of 1976. Avalon Cemetery is facing severe pressure. With the death rate is increasing by 10% per year and more than 200 funerals occurring each weekend, the cemetery is running out of space.

Compounding the problem is the Aids pandemic. With more than 6.5 million of the country's 47 million people infected with HIV, demand for space is increasing. Every weekend, convoys of buses carrying mourners bring the Old Potchefstroom Road to a standstill. This has resulted in special traffic marshals being deployed to deal with the traffic congestion every weekend. Cremation is not considered appropriate for most people so City Parks are encouraging families to consider the "second burial" option, where several members of a family are buried in the same grave.

"We Cannot Continue to Die like this" is a short animated movie which responds to the pressures experienced by the cemetery because of the increase of funerals as a direct result of AIDS related deaths. The film frames the dense weekend funeral traffic in relationship to the 1976 memorial located at the entrance of the cemetery. This is done to bring about awareness to the current day struggle our society is experiencing. History is represented by the memorial to fallen heroes of 1976 - history will demand to know where our leaders are now, when this preventable disease continues to kill millions of people.

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