Apartheid in Mississippi After the Civil War

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As the world lays Nelson “Madiba” Mandela to rest, one cannot help thinking about the oppressive system of Apartheid in South Africa and its American counterpart of segregation in the South. Segregation was America’s Apartheid. Nowhere was it practiced with such harshness as in Mississippi. After the Civil War and the failure of Reconstruction, Mississippi and the other Southern states were allowed to establish Black Codes which restricted the freedoms and liberties of African-Americans in the South. This group of laws included restrictions on things like “curfews, vagrancy, labor contracts, women’s rights, and land restrictions” (NLR -United States Part A , 7). Jim Crow Laws followed where the Black Codes left off. Poll taxes and literacy tests kept African-Americans from voting. Often violence was used to enforce segregation and White rule in Mississippi with hundreds of African-Americans dying do to lynching and other aggression. African-Americans fought for many decades in Mississippi to end segregation and attain equal rights in the South with martyrs like Medgar Evers lea...

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