Racial segregation, sanctioned by law, was widely practiced in South Africa before 1948. But when the National Party, led by Daniel F. Malan, gained office that year, it extended the policy and gave it the name apartheid. The implementation of apartheid, often called “separate development” since the 1960s, was made possible through the Population Registration Act of 1950, which classified all South Africans as either Bantu (all Black Africans), Coloured (those of mixed race), or white. A fourth category—Asian (Indian and Pakistani)—was later added.https://www.britannica.com/topic/apartheidwhat a complete load of codswallop david.... what an absurd fantasy.
throughout white Aus history, at least until '67, aboriginal people suffer many, but not all, the deprivations, violence and abuse that apartheid was renowned and reviled for.
there remains many Aboriginal people who have suffered slave-like conditions, loss of rights, silenced because they ask for human rights..... etc etc etc.
the Voice is about addressing the consequences of those human rights violation imposed by our parents' Govs. Not necessarily our actual parents, but the Govs that ruled Aus for almost 200 years prior to '67. and still there are privations due to being unable to
actually own their own lands and to
build their own homes on their land.