Sunday, November 24, 2019
District six museum essays
District six museum essays The purpose of the District Six Museum is to recreate, preserve and heal the memories of the original inhabitants and their families, so that the precious memories destroyed by apartheid and the Group Areas Act would never be forgotten. It was built to rekindle the good times, and the communities of District Six, do the people who once knew and loved it would never forget it. It is also to show others, what a flourishing community District Six really was before it was destroyed. I think that one of the most important exhibits in this museum is the 75 authentic street signs that are suspended off three ladder columns. I think that this is important because it revives the memories of the good times, the old inhabitants can remember what was situated in each street, what they did and what their purpose was. Another significant exhibit is the plastic floor map, which displays a map of the whole of District Six, including street names and buildings. People have had a chance to reclaim their property in District Six by writing their names and details on the maps, in the exact place where they used to live. This helps others understand what it was like to live in District Six. How the community was so diverse, yet so close. How the community functioned on a whole and who lived where. In conclusion, I would like to say that the Distinct Six museum was very educational and moving at the same time. It touched my heart when we heard a first-hand account of what it was like to live in District Six and then to have your house destroyed in front of your very eyes. It educates national and international visitors with its intricate and detailed exhibits which are impeccably preserved. It gives you so much information about its successful community and the devastation of the destruction, that it makes you wonder how heartbreaking it must have been. To have seen it all destroyed, and knowing deep down that there was n ...
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