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Special Report Transcript Episode 8, Section 6, Time 33:39

They are still there in our churches, they still share the peace in our congregations with each other. Hulle aanvaar nog steeds nagmaal. [They still accept communion.] They’re still part of our daily lives. They live, apparently as if those incidents never happened. They’re not brutalised and brutally beaten up. I mean they were the extension of white law and order into the black community. And they did it more effectively, because they would know where to seek, they would know who to question, they would know who to interrogate, they would know which alley you would be running down if you were running away from them in a way that a white policeman didn’t know. So, they were more brutal and more effective. So, that kind of history … that obvious examples of your victims there in front of you. One … it was really precarious for one’s own soul sake to see how they understand how they might thought they were on the winning side, you know. Or really they were acting out of the strongest of conservative values. I don’t want to judge them, but I would like to hear them speak for themselves and give an account of where they were then and where they are now.

Notes: Fr Michael Weeder interviewed

References: there are no references for this transcript

 
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