ICFRC: Sister Wives: Female Comrades in South Africa's Anti-Apartheid Struggles

Published: Oct. 20, 2016, 10 a.m.

zp dala is a physical therapist, a psychologist, and a writer. Her first novel, "What About Meera," won the 2015 South African Minara Debut Prize, was shortlisted for the Etisalat Literary Prize, and made the top 15 African Novels of 2015 list. A second novel, "The Architecture of Love," is forthcoming in 2017. Her op-ed pieces have appeared in The Guardian and The New York Times.

South Africa's long struggle to transcend Apartheid has been widely documented, both pre- and post-democracy (1994), with an enduring focus on figures such as the late Dr. Nelson Mandela and the late Dr. Walter Sisulu. Less well-known are the stories of the women comrades of the African National Congress, activists or loyal wives, or both, whose lives and losses have drawn too little notice. Such is the case with the personal story of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, "Mother of the Nation," whose multiple arrests, extended time in solitary confinement, and torture at the hands of the governing National Party took an enormous toll. And there are many Winnies who built the history of modern South Africa. Author zp dala will explore their stories.

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