Exhibition marks 40th anniversary of anti-Springbok Tour protests
3 June 2021
Image: Geoffrey Short, Demonstrator and police lines Rugby Park, 1981. Collection of Waikato Museum Te Whare Taonga o Waikato.
A new exhibition that revisits the anti-Springbok Tour movement through the work of local photographers is set to open at Waikato Museum on 5 June.
1981 is an exhibition about one of the most divisive events in New Zealand’s recent history. On 25 July 1981 hundreds of New Zealanders, who believed playing sport with South Africa condoned its racist apartheid system, stormed the field at Hamilton’s Rugby Park.
The pitch invasion disrupted the rugby match between the Waikato team and the touring South African Springboks, resulting in one of urban Hamilton’s most violent days. The game was officially called off at 3:10pm, leaving tour supporters enraged. This milestone moment was captured live on TV and the images were beamed around the world, including South Africa, where fans had got up early in the morning to watch the match.
The 1981 South African rugby tour polarised opinions and inspired widespread protests not only in Hamilton but across the country. New Zealand was split into pro- and anti-tour factions, which clashed at scheduled rugby matches. The remaining tour games were played against a backdrop of escalating battles between demonstrators and riot police.
South Africa’s apartheid system began collapsing in 1990. The All Blacks resumed touring in South Africa in 1992.
Waikato Museum Director Cherie Meecham said the exhibition serves as an important reminder of the anti-apartheid demonstrators’ aspiration for freedom, equality and justice. “Forty years ago, Springbok Tour protesters made history by managing to stop a rugby match in Hamilton,” she said. “This thought-provoking exhibition offers a glimpse into the protests that many believe buoyed the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa.”
Waikato Museum curator Nadia Gush said the exhibition tells the story of a turbulent year for Aotearoa culminating in events that divided families and friends. “The Kirikiriroa protests were the outcome of months of planning, counter-planning and public discontent,” she said. “1981 features photographs taken by Geoffrey Short, Kees Sprengers and John Mercer that document a period of unrest, with New Zealanders of all ages expressing their solidarity with marginalised black South Africans.”
The exhibition runs until 26 September, daily from 10am to 5pm. Entry is free.
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For more information:
Elias Koronis, Communications Advisor
07 245 0072 | elias.koronis1@hcc.govt.nz