African Oral Narratives
Military Intelligence in Apartheid-era South Africa

An interview with Lucas Serage and Pinky Komane, both high school matric students and community activists, by Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava.

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Pinky Komane and Lucas Serage, both high-school matric students and community activists from Maandagshoek, during an oral history interview with Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava.
Pinky Komane and Lucas Serage, both high-school matric students and community activists from Maandagshoek, during an oral history interview with Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava. (2007)
Courtesy of SAHA

Creator: Komane, Pinky
McKinley, Dale
Serage, Lucas
Veriava, Ahmed
Contributing Institutions: SAHA; MATRIX: The Center for Humane Arts, Letters and Social Sciences Online at Michigan State University
Contributors: Emmanuel Mokgoga (Translator)
Moses Moremi (Transcriber)
Biography: Both high school matric students and community activists at the time of the interview, Lucas Serage and Pinky Komane have lived in Maandagshoek since birth. They have been actively involved in community protests to highlight the problems associated with the Modikwa mine and other mine prospectors in their community. They were both arrested after one such protest and spent a brief time in prison.
Description: This interview with Lucas Serage and Pinky Komane, both high school matric students and community activists, was conducted by Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava in Maandagshoek in 2007 as part of the South African History Archive's Alternative History Project, titled 'Forgotten Voices in the Present'.
Date: June 10, 2007
Location: Maandagshoek, Limpopo, Republic of South Africa
Format: Audio/mp3
Language: Sotho
Rights Management: For educational use only.
Digitizer: SAHA
Source: SAHA collection AL3280

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