Skip to main content
Politics & Society
Art & Culture
Biographies
Africa
Central Africa
East Africa
North Africa
Southern Africa
West Africa
Classroom
Places
Timelines
Archives
About Us
Search
Home
English
40. 1903 reviewed by Indian Opinion
30. Potchefstroom traders: we please the poorest class of customers
49. The certificates are burned
64. Congress addresses the Union Parliament, 1946
23. Durban merchants plead for Sunday trading
Introduction
31. Cape traders protest against the Hawkers’ Licences Act
37. Deputation to Lord Selborne, 1905
20. Johannesburg Parsees claim special status
68. Passive resistance 1946-1947
76. The Indian people are an integral and permanent part of South Africa
Introduction
59. The South African Federation challenges Congress over the settlement
54. South African Indian Congress: first annual report, 1924
63. Colonisation scheme: the colonial-born Indians respond - From the book "A Documentary History of Indian South Africans" edited by Surendra Bhana and Bridglal Pachai
27. Transvaal Indians respond to the 1895 arbitration decision
43. Resolutions adopted at a mass meeting of the Natal Indian Patriotic Congress, 1909
51. The ‘Satyagraha’ campaign ends
Introduction
58. Congress has sold our rights
48. Breach of the compromise
74. The Freedom Charter, 1955
77. The South African Indian Council: an assessment from within, 1978
15. My son Gyapershad was decoyed
33. Restrictive legislation against Indians not warranted, 1897
34. Further immigration restrictions, 1903
21. Pariah constables pollute Hindus
32. An unjust and uncalled-for Immigration Bill, 1894
61. Segregation reduces our people to helotry
71.The Group Areas Act
85. Charter for Change, 1981
75. 1960: We are at a turning-point in the history of our country
47. The assault on Gandhi
45. Mass meeting at the Empire Theatre, Johannesburg, 1906
36. The fault of Indian immigrants is their poverty and their skin
69. ‘Moderate Indians’ form the Natal Indian Organisation
84. The South African Indian Council: A. Rajbansi’s opening speech, 1982
35. Colour legislation in the Orange River Colony
25. ‘Free State’ implies equality, declare traders
Bantu Education boycott
First page
« First
Previous page
‹‹
…
Page
74
Page
75
Page
76
Page
77
Page
78
Page
79
Page
80
Current page
81
Page
82
Next page
››
Last page
Last »