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Special Report Transcript Episode 8, Section 6, Time 29:59Miriam Moleleke had similar experiences but she stopped being a victim. // I want to say I’m healing somehow. Ek is gesond. Ek is OK. [I’m healthy. I am OK]. Ek het dit deurgegaan. Ek het gepraat daaroor. Ek het dit gevoel, maar ek het gese ek moet kans gee vir ander mense dat hulle dit moet oorwin. Ek wil nie alleen gesond raak nie. Ek wil dat ander mense ook moet gesond raak. Ek wil aan die einde van die dag ons land in ‘n peace process sien. [I lived through it. I spoke about it. I felt it, but I said. I must give other people a chance to overcome it too. I don’t want to heal alone. I want other people to heal too. At the end of the day I want to see our country in a peace process.] Notes: Miriam Moleleke (Truth Commission Employee) interviewed References select each tab to search for references TRC VictimsA political activist and, later, UDF activist, who was detained and beaten in Worcester, Cape, in 1977. She was again detained in 1985 under section 29 for three months, and in 1987 and 1988 for periods ranging from three to six months under emergency regulations. |