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Groups involved - 1981 Springbok Tour protests

    https://springboktour-lydia.weebly.com/groups-involved.html
    GROUPS INVOLVED: ANTI-TOUR A key group involved in the initiation and organisation of many anti-tour protests was the group know as HART (Halt All Racist Tours); A group set up in 1969 to protest against Rugby Union tours to and from South Africa.HART was founded by the University of Auckland students who opposed the tour and endeavored to make a change.

1981: The year New Zealand roared The Australian Women's ...

    https://www.nowtolove.co.nz/news/real-life/1981-the-year-new-zealand-roared-4720
    Jul 29, 2016 · John Minto voicing his protest to the Springbok Rugby Tour in 1981. John Minto joined HART (Halt All Racist Tours) in the mid-1970s in Napier. In 1977 he moved to Auckland and became secretary of the protest group.

The 1981 Springbok rugby tour - 1981 Springbok tour ...

    https://nzhistory.govt.nz/culture/1981-springbok-tour
    For 56 days in July, August and September 1981, New Zealanders were divided against each other in the largest civil disturbance seen since the 1951 waterfront dispute. The cause of this was the visit of the South African rugby team – the Springboks.

Battle lines are drawn - 1981 Springbok tour NZHistory ...

    https://nzhistory.govt.nz/culture/1981-springbok-tour/battle-lines-are-drawn
    1981 Springbok tour Page 6 – Battle lines are drawn. 1981: a divided New Zealand. ... The anti-tour protest movement included many urban, educated professionals but also enjoyed strong union support. ... This site is produced by the Research and Publishing Group of …

New Zealanders protest against Springbok rugby tour, 1981 ...

    https://nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu/content/new-zealanders-protest-against-springbok-rugby-tour-1981
    Influenced and influenced by anti-Springbok protests in other countries like Australia, Britain (see "Australians campaign against South African rugby tour in protest of apartheid, 1971" and "British Citizens Protest South African Sports Tours (Stop the Seventy Tour), 1969-1970") (1,2).

Anti tour groups - 1981 Springbok Tour

    https://springbokrugbytour.weebly.com/anti-tour-groups.html
    Halt all racist tours (HART) was an anti-tour protest group established by Tom Newnham, Trevor Richards and others in 1969 for the purpose of protesting against the All Black's touring South Africa in 1970. HART said they would lead a campaign of civil disruption if the Springbok South African Rugby team was allowed to tour New Zealand.

Inside the 1981 Springbok tour - Noted

    https://www.noted.co.nz/archive/archive-listener-nz-2011/inside-the-1981-springbok-tour
    Jul 08, 2011 · A former Hart member and flatmate of the group’s national leader Trevor Richards, Wright chaired the Wellington-based protest group Cost (Citizens Opposed to the Springbok Tour). On July 19, 1981, the Springboks flew in, landing at Auckland International Airport on a drizzly Sunday afternoon.

Rugby and South Africa – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand

    https://teara.govt.nz/en/nga-ropu-tautohetohe-maori-protest-movements/page-4
    1981 Springbok tour. In 1981 a Springbok team was permitted to tour New Zealand, and protests against the tour reached a level unparalleled in New Zealand history. This reflected the fact that both the Māori protest movement and anti-apartheid movement had developed significantly.

THE TOUR - 1981 SPRINGBOK TOUR

    https://springboktourprotest.weebly.com/the-tour.html
    As the Tour made its way through New Zealand, the protest movement gained publicity, followers and momentum, culminating on the 12th of September 1981 with the events of the final test at Eden Park in Auckland. Members of the anti-tour movement could be found throughout the country, many spread amongst smaller, local groups.

1981 Springbok Tour protests - Home

    https://springboktour-lydia.weebly.com/
    The 1981 Springbok Tour was a tour involving a NZ Rugby team and the South African Springboks. However, due to recent Apartheid policies in South Africa following the Soweto Riots, the New Zealand rugby team was not allowed to include some of their most valuable players in the team, for they were Maori.This caused huge outrage that resulted in one of New Zealand's largest ever protest movements.

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