
My Grandmother’s Archive
Faced with the uncertainty of the postapartheid world, my grandmother protects her children the same way she survived Apartheid: by making sure their papers are in order.
6437 Article(s) by:
Sheila Adufutse is a feminist activist and trained as a project manager.

Faced with the uncertainty of the postapartheid world, my grandmother protects her children the same way she survived Apartheid: by making sure their papers are in order.

Including another worrying thread of the American “war on terror” on the continent: the training of vigilantes.

It would be an understatement to sum it up as a tragic tale.

Amid the violence of August 2012, one positive feature that stood out was the resilience of the autonomous organization of workers and independent trade unions in Marikana.

It took the writer, later South Africa’s ambassador to Sri Lanka, 30 years to talk to her mother about rape. Her mother’s rape.

“A Hotel Called Memory” concerns itself with elements of mood and scene and downplays aspects relating to plot or story.

Including, it will come as no shock to any woman that Cairo is ranked the worst city for women in the world.

A new history of a radical union that profoundly impacted Southern African politics.

There is considerably less sustained outcry on social media about African life in relation to ongoing forms of structural violence that may be more mundane but just as deadly.

Every Sunday and even on weekdays thousands of Africans living in India’s National Capital Region (NCR) head to “charismatic” church services lasting three to four hours.

The violence of Mozambique’s civil war between 1976 and 1992 is generally silenced. Very little of the war’s history has been written down.

Liberians and the footballing world seem eager to coronate George Weah, Africa’s only winner of the World Player of the Year award as the country’s next president.


Few places in the world have taken a beating like South Sudan. How did it come to this?

This weekend’s music break is dedicated to the isla del encancto.

The Nobel Prize for Literature buzz around Ngugi’s wa Tiong’o’s points to both his seminal contributions to African literature but also his work to kept the memory of Kenya’s divisive past alive.

Pragmatism dictates how many young Tanzanians view a Chinese education: A Chinese education was seen as a logical pathway to securing well-paying reliable employment.

Reading three contemporary South African women authors: Lindiwe Hani, Pumla Gqola and Redi Tlhabi.

What characterizes daily life in Kenya: a seemingly simultaneous flagrant zest for life and hesitant fascination with death.

The dominant approach to revitalizing national parks is one-dimensional and sees local residents as obstacles rather than partners.