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- Q17014861 subject Q7458991.
- Q17014861 subject Q8171717.
- Q17014861 subject Q8429224.
- Q17014861 subject Q8517756.
- Q17014861 subject Q9614987.
- Q17014861 abstract "The day after F W De Klerk's landmark announcement that the African National Congress (ANC) and other political organisations would be unbanned and Nelson Mandela would be released from prison, a small group of Capetonians took to the streets in an act of guerrilla street theatre. The Rainbow Nation Peace Ritual as it eventually came to be known, was actually planned some ten days before the announcement by the Rainbow People's Party and the ritual, march, celebration or carnival, call it what you will, involved children as well as innocent bystanders who were taken by surprise.It lasted only for a couple of hours, beginning at the Old Townhouse in Greenmarket Square, Cape Town, proceeded down Shortmarket Street and ended up in St George's Mall.While the ideal of a new tribe of rainbow people was always a part of South African counter-culture, it was only after Archbishop Desmond Tutu officially "named" the Rainbow Nation, that the phrase became accepted across the board. However the fact remains, that on February 3, 1990, a cross-cultural mix of hippies, street kids, Rastas and artists, a veritable "band of modern merry pranksters" danced through the streets of Cape Town and invoked the goddess of peace and spirits of abundance to awaken and greet a new age of freedom.What is also significant about this event, is the willing participation of a banner painted by Beezy Bailey, joined by the anarchist Nat Tardrew, filmographer Nodi Murphy, ecologist and artist Karen Rolfes, performance artist Rehane Abrahams, publisher David Robert Lewis, musician Philip Nangle, an art teacher called "Johno" along with an assortment of characters that appear on a piece of documentary footage shot by Craig Mathews of Doxa Productions.".
- Q17014861 thumbnail Rainbownationritual.jpg?width=300.
- Q17014861 wikiPageExternalLink 8934.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q101462.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q1052.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q151813.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q15269344.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q188976.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q223388.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q3336814.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q339747.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q43033.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q4586436.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q4880236.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q5465.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q5604316.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q661922.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q7309779.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q7458991.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q8023.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q8171717.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q83162.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q8429224.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q8517756.
- Q17014861 wikiPageWikiLink Q9614987.
- Q17014861 comment "The day after F W De Klerk's landmark announcement that the African National Congress (ANC) and other political organisations would be unbanned and Nelson Mandela would be released from prison, a small group of Capetonians took to the streets in an act of guerrilla street theatre.".
- Q17014861 label "Rainbow Nation Peace Ritual".
- Q17014861 depiction Rainbownationritual.jpg.