255 episodes

The story of our times told by the people who were there.

Witness History: Archive 2012 BBC World Service

    • History

The story of our times told by the people who were there.

    The Death of Steve Biko

    The Death of Steve Biko

    The anti-Apartheid activist Steve Biko, leader of the Black Consciousness Movement in South Africa, died in a police cell in 1977. The South African police claimed he'd gone on hunger strike and had starved himself to death, but he had only been in prison a matter of days.
    Helen Zille was the journalist who helped uncover the truth of his death - that he had in fact died of a brain hemorrhage due to head injuries. The report she published in the Rand Daily Mail showed that the govenment had lied.
    (Image: Members of the Socialist Party of Azania (SOPA) hold a candle light memorial ceremony to mark the death anniversary of the anti-apartheid activist and founder of the Black Consciousness Movement Steve Bantu Biko. Credit: RAJESH JANTILAL/AFP/GettyImages)

    • 8 min
    John Howard Griffin: Black Like Me

    John Howard Griffin: Black Like Me

    John Howard Griffin, a white journalist, dyed his skin black to experience segregation in America's Deep South. John Howard Griffin wrote a book about his seven week experience.
    *** Listeners should be aware that some of the language in this programme reflects the historical context of the time. ***
    Photo: Griffin as a black man in 1959 (left). Courtesy of John Howard Griffin Estate.

    • 9 min
    The Los Angeles Riots

    The Los Angeles Riots

    In May 1992 the people of South Central Los Angeles took to the streets in fury at police brutality.
    They were angry that Los Angeles police department officers accused of beating a motorist called Rodney King, had been acquitted.
    Hear Rodney King's take on the beating, and the unrest and violence that followed it.

    • 9 min
    The Stolen Generation

    The Stolen Generation

    Debra Hocking was taken from her indigenous Australian family as a baby and was placed with a foster family. It was part of a government policy to try to assimilate Aboriginal children into white families.
    Photo: PM Kevin Rudd prepares to apologise to the Stolen Generation in Parliament on February 13 2008. (Getty Images)

    • 8 min
    African Troops During WWII

    African Troops During WWII

    During World War II, African soldiers were a vital part of the Allied forces. Many of them were sent to Burma as reinforcements for the British troops there. Hear just some of their memories - recorded by the BBC in the 1990s.
    Find out more about African troops in Burma in Another Man's War: The Story of a Burma Boy in Britain's Forgotten Army, a book by former BBC correspondent Barnaby Phillips, published June 2015.
    (Photo: East African soldiers in Burma fighting for Britain in WW2, unknown date.
    Credit: Topham Picturepoint)

    • 8 min
    Pong and the birth of the computer game

    Pong and the birth of the computer game

    It is 40 years since a video game was invented which would change the way we play. An on screen version of table tennis, to begin with Pong was only played in video arcades. But soon a home version was created which people could plug into their televisions.
    Photo credit: BBC.

    • 8 min

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