
Up
until the 1970s, District Six was home to almost a tenth of the city
of Cape Towns population. In 1965, the apartheid government, as
it had done in Sophiatown in 1957, declared District Six white.
More than 60,000 people were forcibly uprooted and relocated onto the
barren plains of the Cape Flats. In the process, over a century of history,
of community life, of solidarity amongst the poor and of achievement
against great odds, was imperiled.
The District Six Museum Foundation was established
in 1989 and launched as a museum in 1994 to keep alive the memories
of District Six and displaced people everywhere. It came into being
as a vehicle for advocating social justice, as a space for reflection
and contemplation and as an institution for challenging the distortions
and half-truths which propped up the history of Cape Town and South
Africa. As an independent space where the forgotten understandings of
the past are resuscitated, where different interpretations of that past
are facilitated through its collections, exhibitions and education programmes,
the Museum is committed to telling the stories of forced removals and
assisting in the reconstitution of the community of District Six and
Cape Town by drawing on a heritage of non-racialism, non-sexism, anti-class
discrimination and the encouragement of debate.



The Museum seeks to develop policies relating to
heritage and memory that are both grounded in and seek to develop the
interests of the poor and dispossessed, specifically:
1. The District Six Museum is a heritage project
that seeks to serve the interests of the victims of the various forms
of forced removals that occurred in District Six, the larger city of
Cape Town and in other parts of South Africa.
2. The Museum seeks to place itself at the heart of the process of reconstruction
of District Six and Cape Town through working with the memories and
experiences of dispossessed people. It offers itself as a center for
former residents of District Six and others to recover, explore and
critically engage with the memories and understandings of their District
Six and apartheid pasts, for the purpose of remaking the city of Cape
Town.
3. The Museum seeks to stimulate the recovery and development of different
forms of knowledge of the city, identity and community, and to use these
in debates, discussions and policy development initiatives around diversity,
difference, inequality, injustice and the future of the city.
4. The Museum seeks to develop alliances and partnerships with dispossessed
communities in South Africa and other parts of the world, with non-governmental
organisations, government and others in its quest to open up debate
and discussion around heritage policy development.

General Enquiries:
Telephone: +27-21-466 7200
Fax: +27-21-466 7210
Postal Address: PO Box 10178, Caledon Square,
South Africa, 7905
Physical Address: 25a Buitenkant Street,
Cape Town,
8000
Email: info@districtsix.co.za |
Regarding our Programmes:
Director: Bonita Bennett
Collections, research and documentation: Margaux Bergman
Exhibitions Programme: Tina Smith
Education Programme : Mandy Sanger
Audiovisual Archive : Thulani Nxumalo
Finance : Ismail Noordien |