There's a small community at Kwa-Mhlabuyalingana in the North-Eastern KZN where Joe Mkhwanazi served as a teacher before escaping to Swaziland. The place is called Mseleni. Joe planted PAC seeds in his group of students in the 60's. These people are now in their 70's, 80's, and some are older but when you talk polictics to them its only PAC they know. I believe there are many such communities where the politics of PAC was planted long ago but have been discouraged through isolation. Just a piece of information to get the PAC leadership to do something about, if the PAC is to become a force it once was supposed to be.
We need a rational paradigm to justify a common objective, that would not provide a target, like Patrice Lumumba. How to provide that paradigm? *When Africa Awakes* (1920) by Hubert Harrison Harrison worked with Marcus Garvey but was not a fan. *Black Man's Burden* (1961) by Mack Reynolds Those two are free on the Internet. *The Tyranny of Words* (1938) by Stuart Chase George Orwell mentioned Chase in an essay on politics. He published the book, A New Deal, shortly before FDR's famous speech. He was a member of FDR's brain trust.
We're coming back hard and strong izwe lethu
There's a small community at Kwa-Mhlabuyalingana in the North-Eastern KZN where Joe Mkhwanazi served as a teacher before escaping to Swaziland. The place is called Mseleni. Joe planted PAC seeds in his group of students in the 60's. These people are now in their 70's, 80's, and some are older but when you talk polictics to them its only PAC they know. I believe there are many such communities where the politics of PAC was planted long ago but have been discouraged through isolation. Just a piece of information to get the PAC leadership to do something about, if the PAC is to become a force it once was supposed to be.
The PAC mst unite all past leaders to gain support aluta cintinuer
We need a rational paradigm to justify a common objective, that would not provide a target, like Patrice Lumumba. How to provide that paradigm?
*When Africa Awakes* (1920) by Hubert Harrison
Harrison worked with Marcus Garvey but was not a fan.
*Black Man's Burden* (1961) by Mack Reynolds
Those two are free on the Internet.
*The Tyranny of Words* (1938) by Stuart Chase
George Orwell mentioned Chase in an essay on politics. He published the book, A New Deal, shortly before FDR's famous speech. He was a member of FDR's brain trust.