FAO Quotables

"But being right, even morally right, isn't everything. It is also important to be competent, to be consistent, and to be knowledgeable. It's important for your soldiers and diplomats to speak the language of the people you want to influence. It's important to understand the ethnic and tribal divisions of the place you hope to assist."
-Anne Applebaum

Showing posts with label namibia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label namibia. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Weekly Reading: Palestinian Christians, A Wonderful Life, Blues and Drinking Your Own Pee


Evangelicals Siding with Israel Hurt Palestinian Christians
This Post article should at least give my fellow believers some pause for thought.  Personally, I've always been a little hesitant to support Israel in an unqualified manner.

How Jimmy Stewart Became George Bailey
(You may have to google the title to get the WSJ article to load)  Some great background on Jimmy Stewart's considerable WWII combat experience and his return to Hollywood post V-day.

Super Cool Blue Angels 360 degree video
This is pretty amazing--it will definitely brighten your day for a few minutes!

Recycling Sewage Water? Namibia's Been Doing It For 50 Years
Recycling your own urine--it's not just for SERE school.  One of the most interesting aspects of this article was the background on the role apartheid played in this technology and its hangover effects today in Namibia.

Beautiful video about a Dad with an autistic son



Monday, July 30, 2012

FUUO Poet of the Week from Namibia: Mvula ya Nangolo

FUUO Poet of the Week from Namibia: Mvula ya Nangolo


             Nangolo is widely acknowledged as the national poet of Namibia.  He studied in Europe for several years before returning to Africa in the mid 60's.  An active member of SWAPO (South West Africa Peoples Organization), a political liberation movement, the South African government sentenced him (after a year in solitary confinement without being charged) along with a large group of his compatriots.  He spent 16 years (of a 20 year sentence) in Robben Island beginning in 1968.

             After his release in 1984, he remained active in the Namibian independence movement and in the Namibian government after the country's independence in 1990.  He continues to write today.

            Nangolo's second poem, Guerilla Promise is GANGSTER!  These lyrics could very well have been spit by NWA or ICE-T back in the days.


Robben Island


Dedicated to comrade Andimba Toivo ya Toivo who spent eighteen years of a twenty year sentence on Robben island.  


Just how far is Robben Island from a black child at play?
What forces take his father there with all the world between?
Oh! Mother caution your warrior son again
or else he'll show his might

Just how far is Robben Island from the United Nations
   headquarters?
Have I time to ponder now when patriots are drilling fast?
Spears are flying and the shields are once more bloody
for the drums of war are beating again

Just how far is Robben Island from the London Stock Exchange?
You couldn't hear my talking war drums
for uselessly loud is the enemy's cannon roar

Just how far is Robben Island from the Yankee's White House?
I have no sight for I do not speak languages so foreign
the stars and zebra stripes are dazzling me
the US President speaks--his foreign secretary cheats

Then just how far is Robben Island from the field of Waterloo?
A few bushes away
a village or two in between
and the warrior son will take you there.




Guerilla Promise

I'll rush upon you
like escaping newborn sunray
that dazzle you with my lethal swiftness
'cause I'm the Fight
As unknown as an unborn battle
labouring with steel and hand grenade
I'm death conceived
'til my moment arrives
with pain...blood and terror
I'm a soldier of this realm
I'm a poisoned arrow
I'm a string-bow
I'm a sharpened spear
I'm a sword
waiting in my sheath
only for your death.


Robben Island












Toivo

















Nangolo














LINKS:
http://www.brownturtlepress.com/authors/nangolo.html
http://www.klausdierks.com/Biographies/Biographies_T.htm
http://allafrica.com/stories/201205030140.html

Some of my favorite poetry books:

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

State Dept publishes official history of US in Southern Africa (1969-76)!


Who even knew the State Department published these types of things--I sure didn't, until today!  I will definitely file this one away to refer to for a paper in the future.  It's 2.4mb and 790 pages (thank God for the "find" function). 

Africa: Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs Release of Foreign Relations, 1969-1976, Volume XXVIII
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
July 26, 2011

The Department of State released today Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976, Volume XXVIII, Southern Africa. Additional volumes covering Sub-Saharan Africa and North Africa, 1969–1972, are available on the Department of State website. Documentation on U.S. policy towards North Africa, 1973–1976, is scheduled for future publication on the Department of State website.

The volume contains four chapters (entitled Regional Issues, Portuguese Africa, Angola, and Independence Negotiations), each documenting a segment of U.S. policy toward Southern Africa during the presidencies of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. The documentation reveals that both presidents pursued policies designed to maintain stability in the region and to avoid domestic and international criticism of U.S. ties to the white minority regimes in South Africa and Southern Rhodesia.

The chapter on Regional Issues covers South Africa, which both administrations viewed as a bulwark against Communist expansion in the region. The documents illustrate the tensions between the Nixon administration and the Congressional Black Caucus and between the administration and the Department of State’s Bureau of African Affairs in dealing with South Africa’s apartheid regime. They also show a preference by Nixon and Henry Kissinger to avoid direct involvement in the growing unrest.

The chapter on Portuguese Africa reflects the evolution of U.S. involvement in Angola and Mozambique. Anxious to avoid alienating a key NATO partner, the Nixon administration sought to persuade the Portuguese Government to address the grievances of the black nationalist movements, while quietly granting limited assistance to the Revolutionary Government of Angola in Exile (GRAE) and National Front for the Liberation of Angola (FNLA) leader Holden Roberto. U.S. involvement increased dramatically in January 1975, when Portugal granted independence to its African colonies. Concerns about Soviet expansion and Cuban involvement led the United States to provide covert support to anti-Communist forces in Angola.

The chapter on Angola chronicles the continuation of U.S. support to anti-Communist forces after the Portuguese departed in November 1975. Despite substantial assistance and support from South Africa, Zaire, Zambia, and others, the U.S. was unable to turn the tide in Angola. Congressional passage of the Tunney Amendment in December 1975 cut off aid to Angola and effectively ended U.S. support.

The chapter on independence negotiations chronicles Kissinger’s effort to broker a negotiated settlement to the conflicts in Namibia and Southern Rhodesia.

This volume was compiled and edited by Myra Burton. The volume and this press release are available on the Office of the Historian website at http://www.history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v28
Copies of the volume will be available for purchase from the U.S. Government Printing Office online at http://bookstore.gpo.gov/

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Forced Sterilization in Namibia

Catherine Pringle (Consultancy Africa Intelligence) has published a well researched article about a topic which is hard to grasp because I can't imagine it occurring in the United States...can you imagine the outcry that would erupt.  That said, this is a battle still being waged in Namibia and one which FUUO will be monitoring (I added this topic as one of my google alert feed items). 


Note:  CAI sends out a great newsletter every two weeks with some excellent articles.  You can subscribe from their website.  Click on this link for their latest one hosted in my google docs:
https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B4BE1_xKfeEUYWNiMzQwOWUtZmEwNy00OTU1LWI3MTAtZmUxZmVlMjkxZGQy&hl=en



Opening Pandora’s Box: Forced sterilisation of HIV-positive women in Namibia

The revelation of the practice of sterilising HIV-positive women in Namibia has opened a literal Pandora’s Box of healthcare, legal and social implications. Though this nefarious practice came to light in 2007, it is only now through the work of individuals and advocacy groups that justice is finally being served in what will undoubtedly prove a landmark case, both nationally and internationally.
The sterilisation of HIV-positive women in Namibia is occurring in a global context in which women, and particularly HIV-positive women in Africa, are especially vulnerable to violations of their sexual and reproductive rights. Along with sterilisation, they also face related violations including the refusal to provide healthcare services, hostile attitudes towards HIV-positive women who want to have children, stigmatising at hospitals by hospital staff and breaches of confidentiality.(2)
This discussion paper firstly discusses the practice of forced sterilisation of HIV-positive women in Namibia and then addresses the implications of this practice from a healthcare, legal and social perspective.
Read more at the website...