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INSIDE THE BOOK |
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kusemererwa
banyakabu
ebidoli
_ copyright 2008 Halli Casser-Jayne all right reserved. |
FROM THE INTRODUCTION "This is a book about what is right with Africa. The best of Africa is its people; a people who have endured cruel dictatorships, starvation, epidemics, and yet maintain a purity of heart unmatched by any society that I have ever come across. Like many I went to Africa thinking about what I can do for Africans. I left Africa in awe of what they had done for me. Though the people of Africa have been victimized, they don't accept the role of victim. How refreshing! The media has cast an image of Africans subjugated to their dictators and to the roving bands of guerrillas that terrorize African children. But this is not their only reality. What is extraordinary about Africans is that they have refused to succumb to kneeling to the posture of their towering oppressors, and indeed, have maintained hope, dignity -possibility -against all odds..."
Halli Casser-Jayne FROM THE
FOREWORD BY Misfortunes
befell the people of Bunyoro-Kitara when my famous ancestor King Kabalega
resisted the occupying British forces and was driven into exile. The
wealth of the kingdom was stolen by our enemies and up until now we have
not had the opportunity to regain all that was lost. In 1962, after
gaining independence from the British, the government of Uganda abolished
all of Uganda's kingdoms. Again, our people suffered the loss of their
traditional leadership and culture. I was exiled under the dictatorship of
Idi Amin. Without a penny in my pocket, and with no friends at hand, I was
sent to England for my own safety. I worked at menial tasks to pay for my
education. I often felt bitterness and despair thinking how the great
Kingdom of Bunyoro-Kitara has been reduced to nothing..."
The Road to Possibility
A portion from the proceeds
of this book
will go to the
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70 tritone prints $39.95, illustrated ISBN-0-976-5960-0-8 Contact: 304.283.1163 www.OKUSOBOKA.com
THE MEANING OF OKUSOBOKA... OKUSOBOKA is the Runyoro word for possibility. I chose this word for the title not because of what it is possible for Africa to become. I refer, instead, to the possibility that we the people of the "civilized" world, through our African friends, stand a chance to renew what we once were but seem to have lost to the spoils of civilization.
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