|
Resources |
 |
DISTRICT SIX MUSEUM
|
|
|
|
|
|
District Six Museum
in District Six, Cape Town, South KAfrica: When the apartheid
government swooped on District Six, Cape Town in 1965, forcibly removing
its occupants and declaring the area a "whites-only" zone, the rich
fabric of an impoverished but vibrant community was torn to shreds. Over
60 000 people were wrenched from their homes, livelihoods, community
centres and societal networks, and relocated to the bleak plains of the
Cape Flats, several kilometres away ....
District Six in Cape Town and Sophiatown in Johannesburg, both sites of
diverse and vibrant subcultures, posed similar threats to the apartheid
government, which was intent on enforcing "separate development" for
different ethnic groups. Sophiatown was razed to the ground in 1957 to
make way for the "white area" of Triomf (meaning "triumph" in
Afrikaans). In an effort to preserve the memories of District Six and
create a monument to the thousands of people around the country forcibly
relocated under apartheid, the District Six Museum Foundation was
established in 1989. In 1994, the District Six Museum came into being.
The museum "came into being as a vehicle for advocating social justice,
as a space for reflection and contemplation, and as an institution for
challenging the distortions and half-truths which propped up the history
of Cape Town and South Africa.
"The Museum is committed to telling the stories of forced removals, and
assisting in the reconstitution of the community of District Six and
Cape Town by drawing on a heritage of non-racialism, non-sexism,
anti-class discrimination and the encouragement of debate". The District
Six Museum is a heritage project in itself. Part of its mission is to
provide the space for former inhabitants of District Six to share and
explore their memories and develop new interpretations of both the past
and the present. The museum also functions as a forum where debate and
policy development is initiated.
District Six Museum houses an impressive collection of historical
materials including photographs, paintings, artefacts, physical remains
like street signs, books and studies as well as audio-visual recordings
of District Six, most which were donated by its former residents.
The museum has formed several partnerships with dispossessed
communities, both in South Africa and around the world. It is a founder
member of the International Coalition of Historical Site Museums of
Conscience. The museum, the Stepping Stones Children’s Centre and Ons
Plek, a shelter for girls, are all housed together in a building
belonging to the Central Methodist Mission in Cape Town. The museum is
geared for individuals as well as group and school tours, and is open
from 9am to 4pm Mondays to Saturdays. There is also a bookshop and
coffee shop, and the museum’s Memorial Hall is available for hire for
conferences or other gatherings. |
|
|