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Pale native
Author: Max Du Preez
Pale native
South Africa

Now R175.95
(eB 1760)

Delivery time: Usually within 15 working days.

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Country: South Africa
Format: Softcover
Publisher: ZEBRA PRESS
ISBN: 9781868729135
Publication date: December 2003
Length: 230mm
Width: 150mm
Edition: New title
Pages: 304
Buy this product
Pale native
Author: Max Du Preez

Now R175.95

 


Max du Preez has one hell of a story to tell. In his career as a renegade reporter, he’s survived three dismissals, seven libel suits, thirteen criminal cases, four aeroplane crashes, a bombing, two assassination attempts and was a regular on right-wing hit lists. He was in Soweto on 16 June 1976, witnessed the debauched parties of apartheid cabinet ministers, and stepped over dead bodies in a bombed Angolan village. He looked into apartheid killer Dirk Coetzee’s eyes and published his story of police death squads, and when he visited Vlakplaas himself, he was lucky to get out alive.

Max is best known as founder and editor of the Afrikaans newspaper Vrye Weekblad, and for his weekly television report on the Truth Commission and the programme Special Assignment. His story takes you on a remarkable journey, from the contradictions of history to the triumphs and troubles of the present, from the halls of parliament to the desert of Namibia, from burning townships to the headquarters of covert operations. You’ll meet generals and guerrillas, presidents and hit men. And it’s all reported with the straight-shooting, uncompromising, outspoken frankness that has won him admiration and got him into trouble with the new government as well as the old.

Pale Native is a story filled with drama, about the risks of investigative journalism in the front line. It’s controversial, because Max, as always, is not afraid to expose what others want hidden from view. It’s insightful, giving a fascinating analysis of southern African politics from a skilled reporter who has seen it first hand. And, above all, it’s highly entertaining.


 
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  I am home
Reviewed by Rev Mark Long on 02 January 2007
187 of 383 people found the following review helpful:

As an Afrikaner Max touches on the complexity of being African and pale. His narrative, one that touches regularly – and disturbingly – on events that have been as formative on my existence as on his. I, too, am a pale native, though I lack the roots in Afrikaner identity that plays backdrop to Max’s story. I am a product of the British Empire, but no less connected to the African soil. Like many of my composite tribe, my heritage is a patchwork of belonging: my maternal line bequeaths me a third generation African heritage (and a second generation Scottish!). My adopted paternal line allows me second generation African status, and my biological paternal line a second generation English heritage. All this taken into account, I am more African than English; not Afrikaner, but African none-the-less. There is much in the New South Africa that makes me feel uncomfortable in a pale skin, even unwelcome. A greater part of that discomfort is our history, an awareness that we have contributed to the oppression and rape of Africa, the heritage of our Colonial past and the more recent evil: Apartheid. It is an ancestral guilt, not always personal but collective. Pale Native addresses much of this discomfort, and in so doing, creates a new space for belonging. Max du Preez, as he shares his own struggles as an Afrikaner who seeks to break with the traditions of his tribe, brings me to a new place of certainty, a renewed assuredness that I belong. The African soil is my home. With Max I am able to proclaim – proudly – that, My soul is not the soul of a bywoner … I call myself a native of Africa: pale, but no less native. (pages 5 and 274) I feel the passion as I read (page 5), The energy that I feel gushing from the soil, my African soil, through my foot soles and into my spirit tells me who I am. The ancient mountains and valleys around me whisper to me that I am where I belong. Forces much greater than loud-mouthed politicians and my own fears and insecurities have placed me exactly here at this time. I am who I should be and where I should be. I am home.

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