Into that Heaven of Freedom: The impact of apartheid on an Indian family's diasporic history
This book captures the history of the South African Ismaili families and some of the people among whom they lived from 1894, when the first Ismaili, Jeevan Keshavjee, left Kathiawad (Gujarat) and arrived in South Africa, up to 1994, when the country attained its multiparty democracy following the release of Nelson Mandela. It covers the growth of the greater family, and its dispersal first to Kenya, then to Canada, the UK, Portugal, the US, and elsewhere, and its many successes. It covers apartheid in South Africa and the family's contributions to the struggles against it; the colonial and postcolonial periods during which the family flourished in Africa; and finally the diasporic reality in which we find ourselves today.

With 60 historical photographs, a family tree, and a facsimile of Mahatma Gandhi's letter to Velshi Keshavjee in 1938, this unique account is not only a multigenerational family history but also a history of the Asians of Africa over a hundred years. It's an account of a legacy to bequeath to the generations to come.

1123057622
Into that Heaven of Freedom: The impact of apartheid on an Indian family's diasporic history
This book captures the history of the South African Ismaili families and some of the people among whom they lived from 1894, when the first Ismaili, Jeevan Keshavjee, left Kathiawad (Gujarat) and arrived in South Africa, up to 1994, when the country attained its multiparty democracy following the release of Nelson Mandela. It covers the growth of the greater family, and its dispersal first to Kenya, then to Canada, the UK, Portugal, the US, and elsewhere, and its many successes. It covers apartheid in South Africa and the family's contributions to the struggles against it; the colonial and postcolonial periods during which the family flourished in Africa; and finally the diasporic reality in which we find ourselves today.

With 60 historical photographs, a family tree, and a facsimile of Mahatma Gandhi's letter to Velshi Keshavjee in 1938, this unique account is not only a multigenerational family history but also a history of the Asians of Africa over a hundred years. It's an account of a legacy to bequeath to the generations to come.

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Into that Heaven of Freedom: The impact of apartheid on an Indian family's diasporic history

Into that Heaven of Freedom: The impact of apartheid on an Indian family's diasporic history

by Mohamed M Keshavjee
Into that Heaven of Freedom: The impact of apartheid on an Indian family's diasporic history

Into that Heaven of Freedom: The impact of apartheid on an Indian family's diasporic history

by Mohamed M Keshavjee

Hardcover

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Overview

This book captures the history of the South African Ismaili families and some of the people among whom they lived from 1894, when the first Ismaili, Jeevan Keshavjee, left Kathiawad (Gujarat) and arrived in South Africa, up to 1994, when the country attained its multiparty democracy following the release of Nelson Mandela. It covers the growth of the greater family, and its dispersal first to Kenya, then to Canada, the UK, Portugal, the US, and elsewhere, and its many successes. It covers apartheid in South Africa and the family's contributions to the struggles against it; the colonial and postcolonial periods during which the family flourished in Africa; and finally the diasporic reality in which we find ourselves today.

With 60 historical photographs, a family tree, and a facsimile of Mahatma Gandhi's letter to Velshi Keshavjee in 1938, this unique account is not only a multigenerational family history but also a history of the Asians of Africa over a hundred years. It's an account of a legacy to bequeath to the generations to come.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781927494639
Publisher: Mawenzi House Publishers Ltd.
Publication date: 09/01/2015
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Mohamed M. Keshavjee is a second generation South African of Indian origin. He is a graduate of Queen's University in Canada and attained his LLM and PhD degrees at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He was called to the Bar at Gray's Inn, London. After leaving South Africa in 1962, Keshavjee lived in Kenya where he went to school and later practised law. For the past 30 years, he has lived in France working with the Aga Khan Development Network. He is a specialist in Alternative Dispute Resolution in cross-cultural contexts with a special emphasis on diasporic communities. He is a member of the EU team of International Family Mediators and has travelled extensively throughout the world. At present, he lives in Britain where he lectures at various universities.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

Foreword xi

Prologue 1

Incredible Bombay 4

Chotila: Dates and Ghee 11

Kathiawar in the Nineteenth Century 20

Racism in South Africa in the Late Nineteenth Century 31

Voyage to a New Future 43

Gandhi in the Transvaal 61

Tolstoy Farm, Gokhale and Accord with Smuts 71

Early 1920s: Emigration and Consolidation 82

The Great Depression, Forerunner of the Apartheid State 110

The Turbulent Forties 118

Stirring of the International Conscience 130

March towards Apartheid and Defiance 140

Snapshots of Marabastad in the 1950s 152

Our Encounters with Apartheid 163

Wind of Change 175

Uhuru na Umoja 183

Britain in the 1960s 196

Smelling the Soil of Africa 221

A Tsunami Named Big Daddy 231

A Home at Last 238

Whither the Rainbow Nation? 254

India and the Diaspora Rediscovered 270

Meeting Destiny Head-on 276

Notes 287

Works Cited in the Text 288

Bibliography 289

Family Tree (insert) 96

Family Reunion, Toronto, 2009 (insert) 97

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