Apartheid


Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood
Cry, the Beloved Country
The Power of One (The Power of One, #1)
Long Walk to Freedom
Disgrace
Kaffir Boy: An Autobiography
The Promise
The Housemaid's Daughter
I Write What I Like: Selected Writings
Country of My Skull: Guilt, Sorrow, and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa
Hum If You Don't Know the Words
A Dry White Season
White Dog Fell from the Sky
Tandia (The Power of One, #2)
The Message
White Tears/Brown Scars by Ruby HamadCaste by Isabel WilkersonWhite Tears/Brown Scars by Ruby HamadWhite Fragility by Robin DiAngeloThe Trouble with White Women by Kyla Schuller
Racism
46 books — 1 voter
My Father's Orchid by Rayda Jacobs'Buckingham Palace', District Six by Richard RiveDance with a Poor Man's Daughter by Pamela JoosteSong for Sarah by Jonathan JansenUp from Slavery by Richard E. van der Ross
Understanding Cape Town
103 books — 4 voters

Gaza Writes Back by Refaat AlareerThe Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan PappéPalestine by Nur MasalhaThey Called Me a Lioness by Ahed TamimiDisappearing Palestine by Jonathan Cook
Palestinian POV - nonfiction
54 books — 9 voters

Naught For Your Comfort by Trevor HuddlestonThembe's Cloth by Glenda Ralph-HayMandela and the General by John CarlinApartheid Is a Heresy by John W. de GruchyOf Wheels and Witches by Stephen  Hayes
Apartheid in South Africa
9 books — 5 voters

Noam Chomsky
How, then, does one become an activist? The easy answer would be to say that we do not become activists; we simply forget that we are. We are all born with compassion, generosity, and love for others inside us. We are all moved by injustice and discrimination. We are all, inside, concerned human beings. We all want to give more than to receive. We all want to live in a world where solidarity and companionship are more important values than individualism and selfishness. We all want to share bea ...more
Noam Chomsky, On Palestine

Wilbur Smith
Before we commence this guided tour of Mozambiquan paradise of the proletariat, this shining gem of African socialism, will you bear with me while I give you a few facts and figures. Nobody protested, so he went on. Until 1975 Mozambique was a Portuguese colony. For almost five hundred years it had been under Portuguese control and had been a reasonably happy and prosperous community of some fifteen million souls. The Portugese unlike the British or German colonists had a relaxed attitude toward ...more
Wilbur Smith, A Time to Die

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