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The New Yorker, February 19, 1966 P. 36. The writer comments on her memory of the racial situation in Rhodesia when she lived in Salisbury when her husband was a Cultural Affairs Officer for the U ...
Sister Janice McLaughlin, a Maryknoll Sisters nun who was jailed and later deported by white minority-ruled Rhodesia for exposing human rights abuses, has died at age 79. In a life dedicated to ...
Sister Janice McLaughlin, a Maryknoll Sisters nun who was jailed and later deported by white minority-ruled Rhodesia for exposing human rights abuses, has died. She was 79.
A small white minority seized control of Rhodesia in 1965. Tacit support and weak condemnations extended the regime and its harms. ... extended its life and the harms it imposed.
Fi Glover with three conversations revealing the reality of life in Rhodesia before 1980, when independent Zimbabwe was born, between women whose memories still inform their lives. Show more Fi ...
This was the mid-1970s. I was six or seven, picking up dropped pieces of conversation with the calibrated precision of a war child. Rhodesia was a small southern African country increasingly at ...
Sister Janice McLaughlin, a Maryknoll Sisters nun who was jailed and later deported by white minority-ruled Rhodesia for exposing human rights abuses, has died. She was 79.In a life dedicated to ...
In a life dedicated to social justice, McLaughlin supported the African nationalist struggle that ended Rhodesia and brought Zimbabwe to independence, and she later contributed to the country’s ...