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The Elite Africa Database is a curated collection of resources for researchers interested in African elites. Search by keyword and filter your results by power domain, entry format, date, and other parameters.

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Philani Mthembu

CEO, Institute for Global Dialogue

NGO
South Africa

philani@igd.org.za

Mthembu, Mthembu

CEO, Institute for Global Dialogue

Coercive
Professional Contact

Joseph Mucheru

President, JUMO

Banking Technology
Address: ICEA Lion Centre Riverside Park, 5th Floor, West Wing Chiromo Road, Westlands, Nairobi
Kenya
jumo.world

Mucheru, Joseph

President, JUMO, Banking Technology, Kenya

Economic
Professional Contact

Usman Kedir Mude

Researcher, Adami Tulu Research Center

Research Institute
Ethiopia

Mude, Usman Kedir

Researcher, Adami Tulu Research Center

Coercive
Professional Contact
Professional Contact

Valentin -Yves Mudimbe

Academic/Writer, Professor of Romance Studies and Comparative Literature at Duke University, Maître de Conférence at the École de Hautes Études en  Sciences Sociales, Paris

scholars.duke.edu/person/vmudimbe

Mudimbe Valentin -Yves

Academic/Writer, Professor of Romance Studies and Comparative Literature at Duke University, Maître de Conférence at the École de Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris

Aesthetic
Professional Contact

Peter Munga

Founder and Former Chair, Equity Group Holdings Plc

Banking
Kenya
equitygroupholdings.com

Munga, Peter

Founder and Former Chair, Equity Group Holdings Plc, Banking, Kenya

Economic
Professional Contact

Mungazi, Dickson A.  In the footsteps of the masters: Desmond M. Tutu and Abel T. Muzorewa.  Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2000.

The height of colonial rule on the African continent saw two prominent religious leaders’ step to the fore: Desmond Tutu in South Africa, and Abel Muzorewa in Zimbabwe. Both Tutu and Muzorewa believed that Africans could govern their own nations responsibly and effectively if only they were given the opportunity. In expressing their religious views about the need for social justice each man borrowed from national traditions that had shaped policy of earlier church leaders. Tutu and Muzorewa argued that the political development of Africans was essential to the security of the white settlers and that whites should seek the promotion of political development of Africans as a condition of that future security. Desmond Tutu and Abel Muzorewa were both motivated by strong religious principles. They disregarded the possible personal repercussions that they might suffer as a result of their efforts to alter the fundamental bases of their colonial governments. Each man hoped to create a new national climate in which blacks and whites could cooperate to build a new nation. Each played apart in eventual independence for Zimbabwe in 1980 and for South Africa in1994. Mungazi's examination of their efforts reveals how individuals with strong convictions can make a difference in shaping the future of their nations.

[Source: Amazon.com].

Mungazi, Dickson A. In the footsteps of the masters

Mungazi, Dickson A.
2000

Mungazi's examination of the efforts of Desmond Tutu of South Africa and Abel Muzorewa of Zimbabwe reveals how individuals with strong convictions can make a difference in shaping the future of their nations.

Religious/Spritual
Bibliographic
Profile

Jane Murago-Munene

Filmmaker/Executive Director, Fepaci

Cinema
Kenya
https://twitter.com/fepaci

Murago-Munene Jane

Filmmaker/Executive Director, Fepaci, Cinema

Aesthetic
Professional Contact
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