How do you know if you want a compromise/ coexist with other and not completely overthrow the government and the people head of the government? (You are fighting mainly for reforms)
- Are you fighting for more rights?
- Are you willing to compromise?
- Are there clear injustices which you are fighting against?
-Do you just want equal opportunities and the same freedom others have?
- Are you NOT looking to expel the people who are at root of the problem, in other words are you willing to befriend and live amongst the people that have oppressed you?
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If you answered “yes” to the last questions than this page has the solutions.
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If you answered “no” to the last questions then flip to the next page.
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HOW TO DEVELOP AND MAINTAIN A RESISTANCE:
- You have to find leaders that take charge of these movements, leaders that have passion for what they are fighting, leaders who are willing to sacrifice everything to fight for the cause.
- First start out with something not too radical just to see how the government responds. An example would be the nonviolent campaigns Nelson Mandela and members of the ANC encouraged.
- Before moving to the next step you want to make sure that you have a lot of followers otherwise you should continue step #1 until you do
-Continue the nonviolent movement but begin doing more not just campaigning, for example in South Africa: in 1952-1960 volunteers began defying apartheid laws violating curfews or violating social/public restrictions. They made a large gathering of 5,000 people.
- Although it might be getting harder continue fighting, encourage everyone to join especially students/ young people. For example in 1976 thousands of students protest the use of Afrikaans as the language taught in black schools. This shows strength and power in the movement.
-Continue the boycotting and the protesting even when it gets increasingly more violent as it urges the government to start making a change and begin negotiations. For example in South Africa the violence in protests we’re getting so bad that it brought leaders to secretly begin negotiations.
- Get help from outside/ get the attention of other countries to help you or try your best to get in control of the economy or something the country is largely dependent on. In South Africa they were able to do thus by pressuring international companies to pull investments from South Africa and they got neighboring countries to boycott South African goods.
- After you’re given the rights you asked for/ once a compromise has been reached you will make sure that this agreement has something that will never or make it highly impossible for this to occur again. For example in South Africa they made sure that black South Africans were given the right to vote which means that the chances of these injustices occurring again will be improbable as they were now the ones who had most control over the system.
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CHALLENGES YOU WILL FACE AND SOLUTIONS186Please respect copyright.PENANABjXLHKkMtE
- There will be times when nothing changes but you have to keep going and hope that one day it will start changing
- Prepare for separation in your own groups just make sure they do not become more of a rival than what you are fighting for
- There will be deaths and violence prepare yourself for this and just keep going find motivation in all the lives that we’re hurt as an incentive to keep going
- The people in power won’t want to listen or change what they’ve been doing for years so persist and persist until you can’t
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If it worked for Mandela’s South Africa it can work for you.
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