In the late 1970s, at the age of nineteen, Oiva Angula left his home in Windhoek and went into exile in Angola, where he joined SWAPOs military wing, PLAN. After working for the movement as a political instructor, he was wrongly branded an apartheid spy and traitor during a series of purges within the organisation. SWAPO Captive is Angulas terrifying account of betrayal and torture by his comrades, and his imprisonment for four and a half years in the omalambo the hidden pits in Lubango, Angola, into which he, along with many others, was cast and left to die. SWAPO Captive threads together personal narrative and national history, including Angulas childhood in South West Africa, the rising tensions sparked by apartheid rule, his fathers role in early liberation movements, and his own politicisation and decision to join the struggle. He gives fascinating accounts of life in a PLAN training camp, political education in the Eastern Bloc, and a cadres role in the war for independence. Most of all, this is a story about endurance and courage among people who were cruelly imprisoned, about their camaraderie and hope that one day they would face their captors as free men and women. Angula challenges the wall of silence imposed after independence in Namibia with respect to possible war crimes committed by SWAPO, exposing the dark past of a party that claimed to fight for freedom for all.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 234 x 153mm
Publication Date: 30 Jul 2018
Publisher: Penguin Random House South Africa
Publication City/Country: South Africa
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781776093618
About Oiva Angula
Oiva Alikie Angula attended Martin Luther High School (MLH) in Okombahe and was a founding member of the Namibian Black Students Organisation (NABSO) and leader of the local branch of the SWAPO Youth League. He became a member of SWAPO in 1975 and in 1978 joined SWAPOs military wing PLAN in exile. He received training at the Academy of Social Sciences and Social Management (Parti Naschkola) in Bulgaria and the International Institute for the Training of Journalists (IITJ) in Hungary. He is a founding member and acting chairman of Breaking the Wall of Silence (BWS) a Namibia-based NGO that advocates for the rights of those detained by SWAPO during the Namibian War of Independence.