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In this extract from an interview by Ruth Weiss on September 28, 1979 the then “first and only” Namibian medical doctor, Libertina Amathila, talks about studying in exile and becoming a doctor as well as women’s education, gender issues and life in the Namibian refugee camps in Angola and Zambia. Amathila, who had fled South African ruled Namibia in the early 1960s, became a high-ranking SWAPO official. Ruth Weiss interviewed her most possibly in Lusaka where SWAPO had its headquarters in the 1970s.
By Basler Afrika Bibliographien (BAB) - Namibia Resource Centre & Southern Africa LibraryIn this extract from an interview by Ruth Weiss on September 28, 1979 the then “first and only” Namibian medical doctor, Libertina Amathila, talks about studying in exile and becoming a doctor as well as women’s education, gender issues and life in the Namibian refugee camps in Angola and Zambia. Amathila, who had fled South African ruled Namibia in the early 1960s, became a high-ranking SWAPO official. Ruth Weiss interviewed her most possibly in Lusaka where SWAPO had its headquarters in the 1970s.