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Mark Mathabane

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Mark Mathabane Summary

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Mark Mathabane (born Johannes Mathabane, October 18, 1960) is a tennis player, author, and lecturer. He was born in Alexandra, Gauteng, South Africa. As he explains in his autobiographical book Kaffir Boy, Mathabane survived the oppressive environment of the apartheid system by excelling at tennis and managed to earn a tennis scholarship to a school in the United States, escaping the brutal conditions of his homeland. In America, Mathabane changed his name from Johannes to Mark to avoid persecution by the South African government. Kaffir Boy helped to alert people in the United States to the cruelty of apartheid, especially after it was featured on Oprah Winfrey's talk show in 1985. Mathabane served as a White House Fellow under U.S. President Bill Clinton. Since the end of apartheid in South Africa, Mathabane continues to write books and articles that address human rights issues around the world. Until recently, Mathabane lived with his wife, Gail (b. Ernsberger), their three children (Bianca, b. 1989, Nathan b. 1991 and Stanley b. 1996), and his extended family in North Carolina. They relocated to Portland, OR in 2004.

Books

  • Kaffir Boy
  • Love in Black and White
  • Ubuntu
  • Miriam's Song
  • Deadly Memory
  • The Last Liberal

See also

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    Mark Mathabane
    "What television newscasts did to expose the horrors of the Vietnam War in the 1960s, books like Kaffir Boy may well do for the horrors of apartheid in `80s," Diane Manuel predicted in a 1986 Chicago Tribune Book World review of Kaffir Boy: The True Stor... more

    Mark Mathabane
    Kaffir Boy, Mathabane's first book, detailed the brutal hardship of growing up black in South Africa. A driven student and gifted tennis player, Mathabane came to the attention of American tennis pro Stan Smith who helped him secure college scholarships... more


     
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    Mark Mathabane from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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