论文部分内容阅读
一万分-一介唐纳德·伍兹,南非反种族隔离报纸的总编,在与癌症进行了长期斗争后于8月19日去世。他的名字通过电影“呼唤自由”而不朽。伍兹,第五代南非人,1933年12月巧日出生在特兰斯凯省一个偏远地区,是在英语和当地班图语的双语环境中长大的。成长的环境使他视黑人为劣等人,在开普敦大学攻读法律时他经历了从保守主义到激进主义的漫长历程。听过20世纪50年代的议会辩论之后,他逐渐意识到后来被他称为“最无耻的谎言”的种族隔离。厌倦了法律之后,他转向新闻并在英国和加拿大做了两年初级记者,在参观阿肯色州小石城时又目睹了美国的种族隔离。 1960年回到南非,他加
One Million - a Donald Woods, editor-in-chief of the South African anti-apartheid newspaper, died on August 19 after a long struggle with cancer. His name is immortal through the movie “Calling for freedom.” Woods, a fifth-generation South African, was born in a remote area of Transkei in December 1933. She grew up in the bilingual environment of English and local Bantu. The growing environment made him regard black people as inferior people. He went through a long process of conservatism to activism when he was studying law at the University of Cape Town. After hearing the parliamentary debate of the 1950s, he came to realize that he was later called racial segregation of “the most shameless lies.” After being tired of the law, he turned to the news and made two-year junior reporters in Britain and Canada. When he visited Little Rock, Arkansas, he witnessed racial segregation in the United States. Returned to South Africa in 1960, he added