Mohamed Keshavjee speaks on identity, social change

Mohamed Keshavjee speaks on identity, social changeAuthor Mohamed Keshavjee spoke at University of Texas at Arlington (UTA) about the journey for his identity and the fight for human rights in 20th century South Africa on Monday. The event was presented by both UTA and the Aga Khan Council for the central United States.

Into that Heaven of Freedom: From India to South Africa and Beyond is a memoir of Keshavjee’s family history and his second book. His story has many similarities with the stories of other families during that time, he said.

In the early 1900’s, apartheid segregated the races in South Africa and stripped black and brown people of their rights, Keshavjee said.

Apartheid limited parts of society’s aspirations, as well as their social and economical means, he said.

“We were born into it,” he said. “We had no libraries, we had no swimming pools, we had no parks.”

Two important and influential figures in Keshavjee’s life were Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela, he said.

Source: By Brittany Harborth, The Shorthorn

 

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Independent, civil society media featuring Ismaili Muslim community, inter and intra faith endeavors, achievements and humanitarian works.

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