Langa, Guguletu and Bonteheuwel Tour from Cape Town
About this activity
Smartphone tickets accepted
Experience Highlights
This tour lasts about 3.5 hours and focuses on apartheid. The first stop is the District Six Museum in Cape Town and after that, you will visit the townships, i.e. the neighbourhoods formerly reserved for the black population. The tour includes an expert guide, a driver and minivan transport.
- Learn about the history of South Africa at the District Six Museum.
- Enter the townships that surround Cape Town.
- Travel in comfort aboard an air-conditioned vehicle
- Listen to the explanations of the locals and the expert guide
What’s included
- Tour of Langa, Gugulethu and Bonteheuwel
- Expert guide
- Air-conditioned minivan
Step by Step
This tour delves into the country's past, focusing on one of its darkest pages: apartheid. A minivan will pick you up in Cape Town - usually at Atlantic Seaboard, City Bowl and Waterfront - and escort you through the black areas. The activity lasts approximately 3.5 hours and includes an expert guide. The itinerary includes the following stops:
- District Six Museum - A residential area completely destroyed during apartheid. The museum brings it back to life inside a former Methodist church.
- Langa - The country's first township, with its origins dating back to the 1920s. This term is used to identify the townships reserved for the black population. The uniqueness of Langa is the mix of shantytowns and the better-kept homes of residents who have improved their status but have not wanted to leave the locality. Here you will see a kindergarten, a hostel and the new social houses.
- Bonteheuwel - A township born in the 1960s. Between 1985 and 1987, the area was affected by riots and unrest. Students at the local high school rebelled against the South African army, which was enforcing apartheid laws.
- Gugulethu - Another suburb targeted at non-white ethnic groups and the lower classes. Today this township has been revived by tourism, but in the past it was notorious for the murder of seven young members of uMkhonto we Sizwe, an anti-apartheid sabotage organisation. The stage includes a visit to the memorial
The activity is designed to have direct contact with the residents of the townships, who have experienced certain historical episodes at first hand.