Hector Pieterson
        
        
          South Africa
        
        
          Hector Pieterson born on 1964 and died on 16 June 1976, became the iconic image of the 1976 Soweto uprising in apartheid South Africa.
        
       
        
       
      
     
    
 
    Professional Information
      Professional Areas: 
      Government
      
      Working primarily in: 
      South Africa
      
      
      
      Biographical Information
  
    Hector Pieterson
(At a Glance)
  
    
  Gender: male
  Interests: Education, Sport, Jeu
  Place of Origin: South Africa
 
     Hector Pieterson became the iconic image of the 
1976 Soweto uprising in 
apartheid South Africa when a news photograph by 
Sam Nzima
of the dying Hector being carried by a fellow student, was published
around the world. He was killed at the age of 12 when the police opened
fire on protesting students. For years, 
June 16 stood as a symbol of resistance to the brutality of the apartheid government. Today, it is known as 
National Youth Day , a day on which South Africans honour young people and bring attention to their needs.
On 16 June 1976, school children protested over the imposition of Afrikaans as a medium of instruction in township the children to disperse. They started singing Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika and before they could be dispersed, police opened fire.
There are conflicting accounts of who gave the first command to
shoot, but soon children were turning and running in all directions,
leaving some children lying wounded on the road.
Although the media often named Hector as the first child to die that fateful day, another boy, Hastings Ndlovu,
was actually the first child to be shot. But in the case of Hastings,
there were no photographers on the scene, and his name never became
famous.
When Hector was shot and fell on the corner of Moema and Vilakazi Streets, he was picked up by Mbuyisa Makhubo
(an 18 year old schoolboy) who together with Hector's sister,
Antoinette (then 17 years old), ran towards Sam Nzima's press car. They
bundled him in, and the journalist Sophie Tema
drove him to a nearby clinic where he was pronounced dead. Mbuyisa and
Nzima were harassed by the police after the incident and both went into
hiding. Mbuyisa's mother told the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that she received a letter from Mbuyisa in 1978 from Nigeria but she has not heard from him since. Hector and Hastings Ndlovu are buried at the Avalon Cemetery, Soweto.
Since June 1976, Hector's surname has been spelled 
Peterson and 
Pietersen by the press but the family insists that the correct spelling is 
Pieterson. The Pieterson family was originally the 
Pitso family but decided to adopt the Pieterson name to try to pass as "
Coloured" (the apartheid-era name for people of 
mixed race), because Coloured people enjoyed somewhat better privileges under apartheid than blacks did.
On 
9 August 2002 U.S. lawyer 
Ed Fagan
led a $50bn class action suit by apartheid-era victims against
international firms and banks who profited from dealings with the
Apartheid regime. Among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit is Dorothy
Molefi, Hector's mother. The South African government as well as 
Nelson Mandela, 
Thabo Mbeki and 
Desmond Tutu have distanced themselves from the lawsuit.
On June 16, 2002 the 
Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum
was opened near the place he was shot in Orlando West, Soweto to honour
Hector and those who died around the country in the 1976 uprising.
Funded by the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
(R16-million) and the Johannesburg City Council (R7,2 million), it has
become a major tourist attraction. The start of the museum begins with
pictures of Hector Pierterson's death. The museum fuses memorabilia
with modern technology and cultural history. In 2007 Hector's sister
Antoinette, who is seen in the famous photograph, was working at the
museum as a tour guide. (source wikipedia)