African Oral Narratives
Military Intelligence in Apartheid-era South Africa

An interview with government social worker Priscilla Matshidiso Ramogale of Sebokeng, by Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava.

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Priscilla Ramogale, a social worker from Sebokeng, during an oral history interview with Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava.
Priscilla Ramogale, a social worker from Sebokeng, during an oral history interview with Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava. (2007)
SAHA

Creator: McKinley, Dale
Ramogale, Priscilla
Veriava, Ahmed
Contributing Institutions: SAHA; MATRIX: The Center for Humane Arts, Letters and Social Sciences Online at Michigan State University
Contributor: Moses Moremi (Transcriber)
Biography: Forty-nine years old at the time of the interview, Priscilla Matshidiso Ramogale was born and grew up in Bloemfontein in a family of educators (her father was a university lecturer). She studied at Fort Hare University and Rand Afrikaans University and received a BA in Psychology. She moved to Sebokeng in 1984 to take up a government job as a social worker and has remained in this job ever since (now with Social Welfare Department where she mostly does work with indigents). She is married with four children and lives in a four-bedroom private house.
Description: This interview with government social worker Priscilla Matshidiso Ramogale was conducted by Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava in Sebokeng in 2007 as part of the South African History Archive's Alternative History Project, titled 'Forgotten Voices in the Present'.
Date: September 12, 2007
Location: Sebokeng, Gauteng, Republic of South Africa
Format: Audio/mp3
Language: English
Rights Management: For educational use only.
Digitizer: SAHA
Source: SAHA collection AL3280

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