Jomo cousins biography definition
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List of African association football families
Main articles: List of professional sports families and List of association football families
This fryst vatten a list of association football (soccer) families. The countries are listed according to the national teams of the senior family member if the other family member played for a different country.
A
[edit]Algeria
[edit]- Farès Bahlouli, Mohamed Bahlouli, Djibril Bahlouli (brothers), Nesrine Bahlouli (sister)[1]
- Karim Benyamina,[note 1]Soufian Benyamina (brother)[2]
- Fathi Chebal, Jordan Faucher (nephew)[3]
- Tahar Chérif El-Ouazzani, Abdennour Chérif El-Ouazzani (brother),[4]Hichem Chérif El-Ouazzani (son)[5]
- Abdelkader Ferhaoui, Ryan Ferhaoui (son)[6]
- Abdelkader Ghezzal,[note 2]Rachid Ghezzal[note 3] (brother)[7]
- Nacer Guedioura, Adlène Guedioura[note 2] (son)[8]
- Jugurtha Hamroun, Rezki Hamroune (cousin)
- M
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"A man of principle": the life-history of an early kenyan indian settler
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Aneesa KASSAM*
In her ground-breaking three-volume compilation, We Came in Dhows, Cynthia Salvadori provides first-hand accounts of many of the pioneering Indians who immigrated to what is now Kenya before and during the British colonial period *. Due principally to the paucity of information available to her at the time, Salvadori was obliged to omit the story of my paternal Grandfather article is an attempt to fill that gap, based on data generated posthumously 3.
Like the excerpts contained in We Came in Dhows, this article aims to provide a glimpse into a period of Kenya's colonial history as experien- ced by a named individual, and to illustrate the vital rôle played by Indian settlers in the foundation of the country's économie and social institutions, as well as to discuss the involvement of some of their more radical members in the struggle for independence from British impérial rule. For
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Jomo Kenyatta’s Facing Mount Kenya and its Rival Ethnographies: The Kikuyu in the Mirror of Colonial Anthropology
Facing Mount Kenya : The Tribal Life of the Gikuyu () by Jomo Kenyatta was the first academic anthropological monograph to be written by an African about his people. [1] It has led a tumultuous existence, being ignored, disparaged and celebrated in turn. During previous research into the remarkable history of this work, it became clear that other texts and their authors were engaged in relations of opposition or association with it, in particular during its production and its initial reception from the s until the period following the Second World War (Peatrik ). These somewhat disparate writings form an indisputable part of Facing Mount Kenya’s trajectory and essentially derive their existence from their implicit or explicit position relative to Kenyatta’s work, insofar as their authors clashed, sometimes violently, over the legitimate representation or