Let My People GoThe author, formerly a Zulu chief "tells of his education at an American missionary college, of his becoming a chief of his people, and of his long battle against racial discrimination, for which he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1961." |
Contents
Defiance and deposit | 125 |
After defiance | 142 |
The Freedom Charte | 155 |
Copyright | |
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Adams African National Congress Africanists apartheid areas arrest aware banned Bantu Education Bantu Education Act Bantustan became beer hall boycott called Cato Manor chiefs chieftainship Christian Council Church civilised co-operate colour Communists Conference defence Defiance Campaign delegates demonstrations doubt Dube Durban Corporation Dutch Reformed Dutch Reformed Church Edendale effect election European farmers freedom Freedom Charter gaol Government Groutville Hertzog Indian Johannesburg labour land laws leaders live Loram Luthuli Malan meeting Minister Mission Reserve missionary Natal Nationalists Native Affairs Department Native Commissioner non-violent oppression organisation Parliament pass Pietermaritzburg police political Pondoland Port Elizabeth Pretoria race reason recognise reply resistance seemed Sharpeville Smuts South Africa Special Branch Stanger struggle teachers things took Treason Trial Umlazi United Party Verwoerd voice white Press white South Africa white supremacy whole women workers Xuma Zulu