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Donald Woods

Donald James Woods CBE (15 December 1933 – 19 August 2001) was a South African journalist and anti-apartheid activist. As editor of the Daily Dispatch, he was known for befriending fellow activist Steve Biko, who was killed by police after being detained by the South African government. Woods continued his campaign against apartheid in London, and in 1978 became the first private citizen to address the United Nations Security Council.[1]

Donald Woods

Woods in 1978
Born
Donald James Woods

(1933-12-15)15 December 1933
Died19 August 2001(2001-08-19) (aged 67)
London, England
Occupations
SpouseWendy Woods

Early life

Woods was born at Hobeni, Cape Province, where his family had lived for five generations. His ancestors arrived in South Africa with the 1820 Settlers. Woods was born and raised in what has since become the Eastern Cape province, as were both of his parents, all four of his grandparents, all eight of his great grandparents and all sixteen of his great, great grandparents. All thirty-two of his great great great grandparents emigrated to the Cape Colony from England and Ireland.[2] His parents ran a trading post in Transkei, a tribal reserve, which the South African government would later designate a bantustan. As a boy Woods had extensive regular contact with the Xhosa people. He spoke fluent Xhosa and Afrikaans, as well as his mother tongue, English.

Woods and his brother, Harland, were sent to the Christian Brothers College in Kimberley in the predominantly Afrikaner Northern Cape for their secondary education. The school was academically rigorous, and the Irish Christian Brothers had a reputation for neutrality on questions of politics. While Woods was away at school, the National Party came to power in 1948 and began to build the apartheid structure. When he started his law course at the University of Cape Town in 1952, Woods supported government policies that separated the races, but was wary of the heavy hand of the Afrikaner National Party. During his legal studies he started to question the separatist views he grew up with, becoming politically active in the Federal Party, which rejected apartheid and drew its support from liberal English-speaking whites.

Woods spent two years as a legal apprentice, with the goal of becoming a barrister, but gravitated toward journalism. Just as he was about to embark on his career as a journalist, the 23-year-old Woods was approached by the Federal Party to run for a seat in parliament. His campaign was unsuccessful, and he went back to his job as a cub reporter for the Daily Dispatch newspaper in East London. For two years during the late 1950s, he honed his skills as a journalist by writing and sub-editing for various newspapers in England and Wales. It was while working in Wales that he developed a love and respect for the Welsh people that endured all his life. While working on the Western Mail in Cardiff, Woods became friends with colleague Glyn Williams, who later joined him on the Daily Dispatch and eventually became editor himself. Before returning to South Africa, Woods served as a correspondent for London's now defunct Daily Herald, travelling throughout the eastern and southern United States, eventually arriving in Little Rock, Arkansas, where he filed stories comparing U.S. segregation with South Africa's apartheid.

Woods went back to work at the Dispatch and married Wendy Bruce, whom he had known since they were teenagers in their hometown. They had six children: Jane, Dillon, Duncan, Gavin, Lindsay, and Mary. Their fourth son, Lindsay, born in 1970, contracted meningitis and died just before his first birthday. The family had settled into a comfortable life in East London, and in February 1965, at the age of 31, Woods rose to the position of editor-in-chief of the Daily Dispatch,[3] which held an anti-apartheid editorial policy. As editor, Woods expanded the readership of the Dispatch to include Afrikaans-speakers as well as black readers in nearby Transkei and Ciskei. Woods integrated the editorial staff and flouted apartheid policies by seating black, white, and coloured reporters in the same work area. He favoured hiring reporters who had had experience working overseas. Woods had several scrapes with the South African Security Police regarding editorial matters and on numerous occasions ruffled the feathers of Prime Minister B. J. Vorster in frank, face-to-face exchanges regarding the content of Dispatch editorials. Woods found himself tiptoeing around, and sometimes directly challenging, the increasingly restrictive government policies enacted to control the South African press.

Relationship with Steve Biko

Under Woods, the Daily Dispatch was very critical of the South African government, but was also initially critical of the emerging Black Consciousness Movement under the leadership of Steve Biko. Mamphela Ramphele, Biko’s partner, berated Woods for writing misleading stories about the movement, challenging him to meet with Biko.

The two men became friends, leading the Security Police to monitor Woods's movements. Nevertheless, Woods continued to provide political support to Biko, both through writing editorials in his newspaper and controversially hiring black journalists to the Daily Dispatch.

On 16 June 1976, an uprising broke out in Soweto, in which predominantly 13- to 16-year-old students from Soweto participated in a march to protest against being taught in Afrikaans and against the Bantu Education system in general. The police ordered the children to disperse, and when they refused, the police opened fire, killing scores (and by some estimates, hundreds)[4] of them, as the children pelted the police with stones. The government responded by banning the entire Black Consciousness Movement along with many other political organisations, as well as issuing banning orders against various people. Donald Woods was one of them and was effectively placed under house arrest.[5][6]

Returning to his home on the evening of 18 August 1977, from a trip to Cape Town, Biko was arrested, imprisoned and mortally beaten. He was killed on 12 September. Woods went to the morgue with Biko's wife, Ntsiki Mashalaba, and photographed Biko's battered body. The photographs were later published in Woods's book, exposing the South African government's cover-up of the cause of Biko's death.

Life in exile

 
Telle Bridge border post from the South African side

Soon after Biko's death, Woods was himself placed under a five-year ban. He was stripped of his editorship, and was not allowed to speak publicly, write, travel or work for the duration of his ban. Over the next year, he was subjected to increasing harassment, and his phone was tapped. His six-year-old daughter was severely burned by a T-shirt laced with ninhydrin.[1] Convinced that the government was trying to have him killed, Woods decided to flee South Africa.[7]

Woods and friends Drew Court and Robin Walker devised a plan for him to be smuggled out of his house. Disguised as a Roman Catholic priest, Father "Teddy Molyneaux", on New Year's Eve 1977, Woods hitchhiked out of town then drove in convoy with Court 480 kilometres (300 mi) before attempting to cross the Telle River, a tributary of the Orange River, between South Africa and Lesotho. Following days of steady rain, the river had flooded, leaving him to resort to crossing at the Telle Bridge border crossing in a Lesotho Postal Service truck driven by an unsuspecting Mosotho man, who was merely giving the "priest" a lift.

He made it undetected by South African customs and border officials to Lesotho, where, prompted by a prearranged telephone call, his family joined him shortly afterwards. Once they arrived in Lesotho, Bruce Haigh, a diplomat of the Australian Embassy in South Africa, drove him to Maseru. With the help of the British High Commission (in Maseru) and from the Government of Lesotho, they flew under United Nations passports and with one Lesotho Government official over South African airspace, via Botswana to London where they were granted political asylum.[8]

After arriving in London, Woods became an active spokesman against apartheid. Acting upon the advice of Oliver Tambo, the President of the African National Congress (ANC), Woods became a passionate advocate of nations imposing sanctions against South Africa. He toured the United States campaigning for sanctions against apartheid. The trip included a three-hour session, arranged by President Jimmy Carter, to address officials in the U.S. Department of State. Woods also spoke at a session of the United Nations Security Council in 1978.

On 11 February 1990, Nelson Mandela was released from prison after serving twenty-seven years, 17 of those years on Robben Island. That Easter, Mandela came to London to attend a concert at Wembley Stadium to thank the anti-apartheid Movement and the British people for their years of campaigning against apartheid. Woods gave Mandela a tie in the black, green and gold colours of the African National Congress to celebrate the event, which Mandela wore at the concert the next day.

Return to South Africa

Woods returned to South Africa in 1994 to support the fundraising efforts for the ANC election fund. His son Dillon was one of the organizers of the fundraising appeal in the United Kingdom. On 27 April 1994, Woods went to vote at the City Hall in Johannesburg. A cheering crowd took him to the head of the queue, giving him the place of honour so that he could be one of the first to vote in the new South Africa. Following the election, Woods worked for the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism in Johannesburg.

On 9 September 1997, on the twentieth anniversary of the death of Steve Biko, Woods was present in East London when a statue of Biko was unveiled by Nelson Mandela and the bridge across the Buffalo River was renamed the "Biko Bridge". Woods also gave his support to the Action for Southern Africa event in Islington, London honouring Biko, helping to secure messages from Ntsiki Biko, Mamphela Ramphele (then the Vice Chancellor of the University of Cape Town) and Mandela.

Cry Freedom

Director Richard Attenborough filmed the story of Woods and Steve Biko, based upon the books which Woods had written, under the title Cry Freedom. Donald and Wendy Woods became involved in the project, working closely with the actors and crew. The film was shot largely on location in Zimbabwe (South Africa still being under apartheid at the time). It was released in 1987 to critical acclaim, and won several awards. Woods was portrayed by Kevin Kline, who became friends with Woods and his wife and family during the filming. The friendship continued until Woods' death in 2001. Wendy Woods was played by Penelope Wilton. Biko was played by Denzel Washington, who was Oscar-nominated for the role. At nearly three hours long, the film also featured appearances by John Thaw, Timothy West, Julian Glover, Ian Richardson and Zakes Mokae.

It closes with a list of deaths of black activists in police custody in South Africa, with the official explanations of cause of death.

Final years

In the last year of his life, Woods gave his name to support an appeal to erect a statue of Nelson Mandela in Trafalgar Square outside the South African High Commission, where anti-apartheid campaigners had demonstrated during the period of the apartheid regime.

Woods was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2000. He died of cancer on 19 August 2001 in London.[9][10][11]

The nine-foot (3 m) high bronze statue of Mandela was eventually erected on nearby Parliament Square, Westminster City Council. It was unveiled by the British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, on 29 August 2007, in the presence of Woods' widow, Wendy, Nelson Mandela and his wife Graça Machel, and Richard Attenborough.

Wendy died in 2013.[12]

Donald Woods's eldest son Dillon Woods is currently the Chief Executive of the East London-based Donald Woods Foundation, which is an educational foundation in South Africa.[13] His son Gavin appears on the Johnny Vaughan show on Radio X.[14]

Awards

Memorials

  • Donald Woods Gardens – A street in Tolworth, Surrey
  • Donald Woods Foundation – An NGO assisting the South African National Department of Health in the management and treatment of HIV/AIDS in rural populations.

Works

  • Asking for Trouble: The Autobiography of a Banned Journalist. Atheneum. 1981. ISBN 978-0-689-11159-4.
  • South African Dispatches: Letters to My Countrymen. Penguin. 1987. ISBN 978-0-14-010080-8.
  • Biko. Paddington Press. 1978. ISBN 978-0-8050-1899-8., later edition published by Henry Holt, New York, 1987
  • Filming with Attenborough
  • Rainbow Nation Revisited: South Africa's Decade of Democracy. André Deutsch. 2000. ISBN 978-0-233-99830-5.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Richard, Aldrich (2006). Lessons from history of education : the selected works of Richard Aldrich. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415358910. OCLC 58600047.
  2. ^ Asking for Trouble: Autobiography of a Banned Journalist by Donald Woods: Peter Smith, 1991
  3. ^ Williams, Glyn. "The History of the Daily Dispatch". dispatchlive.co.za. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  4. ^ Tuttle, K. (2010). "Soweto, South Africa". In Henry Louis Gates, Jr.; Kwame Anthony Appiah (eds.). Encyclopedia of Africa. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195337709.
  5. ^ 16 June 1976 Student Uprising in Soweto. africanhistory.about.com
  6. ^ Harrison, David (1983). The White Tribe of Africa. University of California Press. p. 290. ISBN 978-0-520-05066-2.
  7. ^ "1978: Newspaper editor flees South Africa". On This Day: 1 January, BBC.
  8. ^ Blandy, Fran (31 December 2007). "SA editor's escape from apartheid, 30 years on". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  9. ^ Uys, Stanley (20 August 2001). "Obituary: Donald Woods". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  10. ^ "Donald Woods (obituary)". The Daily Telegraph. 20 August 2001. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Donald Woods, who cried for freedom, died on August 19th, aged 67". The Economist. 23 August 2001. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  12. ^ Hain, Peter (22 May 2013). "Wendy Woods obituary". The Guardian. London.
  13. ^ . Donald Woods Foundation. 10 December 2015. Archived from the original on 21 December 2015.
  14. ^ Johnny Vaughan on Radio X: 20171128

External links

donald, woods, other, people, named, disambiguation, donald, james, woods, december, 1933, august, 2001, south, african, journalist, anti, apartheid, activist, editor, daily, dispatch, known, befriending, fellow, activist, steve, biko, killed, police, after, b. For other people named Donald Woods see Donald Woods disambiguation Donald James Woods CBE 15 December 1933 19 August 2001 was a South African journalist and anti apartheid activist As editor of the Daily Dispatch he was known for befriending fellow activist Steve Biko who was killed by police after being detained by the South African government Woods continued his campaign against apartheid in London and in 1978 became the first private citizen to address the United Nations Security Council 1 Donald WoodsCBEWoods in 1978BornDonald James Woods 1933 12 15 15 December 1933Hobeni Cape Province Union of South AfricaDied19 August 2001 2001 08 19 aged 67 London EnglandOccupationsJournalist Anti apartheid activistSpouseWendy Woods Contents 1 Early life 2 Relationship with Steve Biko 3 Life in exile 4 Return to South Africa 5 Cry Freedom 6 Final years 7 Awards 8 Memorials 9 Works 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life EditWoods was born at Hobeni Cape Province where his family had lived for five generations His ancestors arrived in South Africa with the 1820 Settlers Woods was born and raised in what has since become the Eastern Cape province as were both of his parents all four of his grandparents all eight of his great grandparents and all sixteen of his great great grandparents All thirty two of his great great great grandparents emigrated to the Cape Colony from England and Ireland 2 His parents ran a trading post in Transkei a tribal reserve which the South African government would later designate a bantustan As a boy Woods had extensive regular contact with the Xhosa people He spoke fluent Xhosa and Afrikaans as well as his mother tongue English Woods and his brother Harland were sent to the Christian Brothers College in Kimberley in the predominantly Afrikaner Northern Cape for their secondary education The school was academically rigorous and the Irish Christian Brothers had a reputation for neutrality on questions of politics While Woods was away at school the National Party came to power in 1948 and began to build the apartheid structure When he started his law course at the University of Cape Town in 1952 Woods supported government policies that separated the races but was wary of the heavy hand of the Afrikaner National Party During his legal studies he started to question the separatist views he grew up with becoming politically active in the Federal Party which rejected apartheid and drew its support from liberal English speaking whites Woods spent two years as a legal apprentice with the goal of becoming a barrister but gravitated toward journalism Just as he was about to embark on his career as a journalist the 23 year old Woods was approached by the Federal Party to run for a seat in parliament His campaign was unsuccessful and he went back to his job as a cub reporter for the Daily Dispatch newspaper in East London For two years during the late 1950s he honed his skills as a journalist by writing and sub editing for various newspapers in England and Wales It was while working in Wales that he developed a love and respect for the Welsh people that endured all his life While working on the Western Mail in Cardiff Woods became friends with colleague Glyn Williams who later joined him on the Daily Dispatch and eventually became editor himself Before returning to South Africa Woods served as a correspondent for London s now defunct Daily Herald travelling throughout the eastern and southern United States eventually arriving in Little Rock Arkansas where he filed stories comparing U S segregation with South Africa s apartheid Woods went back to work at the Dispatch and married Wendy Bruce whom he had known since they were teenagers in their hometown They had six children Jane Dillon Duncan Gavin Lindsay and Mary Their fourth son Lindsay born in 1970 contracted meningitis and died just before his first birthday The family had settled into a comfortable life in East London and in February 1965 at the age of 31 Woods rose to the position of editor in chief of the Daily Dispatch 3 which held an anti apartheid editorial policy As editor Woods expanded the readership of the Dispatch to include Afrikaans speakers as well as black readers in nearby Transkei and Ciskei Woods integrated the editorial staff and flouted apartheid policies by seating black white and coloured reporters in the same work area He favoured hiring reporters who had had experience working overseas Woods had several scrapes with the South African Security Police regarding editorial matters and on numerous occasions ruffled the feathers of Prime Minister B J Vorster in frank face to face exchanges regarding the content of Dispatch editorials Woods found himself tiptoeing around and sometimes directly challenging the increasingly restrictive government policies enacted to control the South African press Relationship with Steve Biko EditUnder Woods the Daily Dispatch was very critical of the South African government but was also initially critical of the emerging Black Consciousness Movement under the leadership of Steve Biko Mamphela Ramphele Biko s partner berated Woods for writing misleading stories about the movement challenging him to meet with Biko The two men became friends leading the Security Police to monitor Woods s movements Nevertheless Woods continued to provide political support to Biko both through writing editorials in his newspaper and controversially hiring black journalists to the Daily Dispatch On 16 June 1976 an uprising broke out in Soweto in which predominantly 13 to 16 year old students from Soweto participated in a march to protest against being taught in Afrikaans and against the Bantu Education system in general The police ordered the children to disperse and when they refused the police opened fire killing scores and by some estimates hundreds 4 of them as the children pelted the police with stones The government responded by banning the entire Black Consciousness Movement along with many other political organisations as well as issuing banning orders against various people Donald Woods was one of them and was effectively placed under house arrest 5 6 Returning to his home on the evening of 18 August 1977 from a trip to Cape Town Biko was arrested imprisoned and mortally beaten He was killed on 12 September Woods went to the morgue with Biko s wife Ntsiki Mashalaba and photographed Biko s battered body The photographs were later published in Woods s book exposing the South African government s cover up of the cause of Biko s death Life in exile Edit Telle Bridge border post from the South African side Soon after Biko s death Woods was himself placed under a five year ban He was stripped of his editorship and was not allowed to speak publicly write travel or work for the duration of his ban Over the next year he was subjected to increasing harassment and his phone was tapped His six year old daughter was severely burned by a T shirt laced with ninhydrin 1 Convinced that the government was trying to have him killed Woods decided to flee South Africa 7 Woods and friends Drew Court and Robin Walker devised a plan for him to be smuggled out of his house Disguised as a Roman Catholic priest Father Teddy Molyneaux on New Year s Eve 1977 Woods hitchhiked out of town then drove in convoy with Court 480 kilometres 300 mi before attempting to cross the Telle River a tributary of the Orange River between South Africa and Lesotho Following days of steady rain the river had flooded leaving him to resort to crossing at the Telle Bridge border crossing in a Lesotho Postal Service truck driven by an unsuspecting Mosotho man who was merely giving the priest a lift He made it undetected by South African customs and border officials to Lesotho where prompted by a prearranged telephone call his family joined him shortly afterwards Once they arrived in Lesotho Bruce Haigh a diplomat of the Australian Embassy in South Africa drove him to Maseru With the help of the British High Commission in Maseru and from the Government of Lesotho they flew under United Nations passports and with one Lesotho Government official over South African airspace via Botswana to London where they were granted political asylum 8 After arriving in London Woods became an active spokesman against apartheid Acting upon the advice of Oliver Tambo the President of the African National Congress ANC Woods became a passionate advocate of nations imposing sanctions against South Africa He toured the United States campaigning for sanctions against apartheid The trip included a three hour session arranged by President Jimmy Carter to address officials in the U S Department of State Woods also spoke at a session of the United Nations Security Council in 1978 On 11 February 1990 Nelson Mandela was released from prison after serving twenty seven years 17 of those years on Robben Island That Easter Mandela came to London to attend a concert at Wembley Stadium to thank the anti apartheid Movement and the British people for their years of campaigning against apartheid Woods gave Mandela a tie in the black green and gold colours of the African National Congress to celebrate the event which Mandela wore at the concert the next day Return to South Africa EditWoods returned to South Africa in 1994 to support the fundraising efforts for the ANC election fund His son Dillon was one of the organizers of the fundraising appeal in the United Kingdom On 27 April 1994 Woods went to vote at the City Hall in Johannesburg A cheering crowd took him to the head of the queue giving him the place of honour so that he could be one of the first to vote in the new South Africa Following the election Woods worked for the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism in Johannesburg On 9 September 1997 on the twentieth anniversary of the death of Steve Biko Woods was present in East London when a statue of Biko was unveiled by Nelson Mandela and the bridge across the Buffalo River was renamed the Biko Bridge Woods also gave his support to the Action for Southern Africa event in Islington London honouring Biko helping to secure messages from Ntsiki Biko Mamphela Ramphele then the Vice Chancellor of the University of Cape Town and Mandela Cry Freedom EditDirector Richard Attenborough filmed the story of Woods and Steve Biko based upon the books which Woods had written under the title Cry Freedom Donald and Wendy Woods became involved in the project working closely with the actors and crew The film was shot largely on location in Zimbabwe South Africa still being under apartheid at the time It was released in 1987 to critical acclaim and won several awards Woods was portrayed by Kevin Kline who became friends with Woods and his wife and family during the filming The friendship continued until Woods death in 2001 Wendy Woods was played by Penelope Wilton Biko was played by Denzel Washington who was Oscar nominated for the role At nearly three hours long the film also featured appearances by John Thaw Timothy West Julian Glover Ian Richardson and Zakes Mokae It closes with a list of deaths of black activists in police custody in South Africa with the official explanations of cause of death Final years EditIn the last year of his life Woods gave his name to support an appeal to erect a statue of Nelson Mandela in Trafalgar Square outside the South African High Commission where anti apartheid campaigners had demonstrated during the period of the apartheid regime Woods was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE in 2000 He died of cancer on 19 August 2001 in London 9 10 11 The nine foot 3 m high bronze statue of Mandela was eventually erected on nearby Parliament Square Westminster City Council It was unveiled by the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on 29 August 2007 in the presence of Woods widow Wendy Nelson Mandela and his wife Graca Machel and Richard Attenborough Wendy died in 2013 12 Donald Woods s eldest son Dillon Woods is currently the Chief Executive of the East London based Donald Woods Foundation which is an educational foundation in South Africa 13 His son Gavin appears on the Johnny Vaughan show on Radio X 14 Awards EditConscience in Media Award from the American Society of Journalists and Authors in 1978 World Association of Newspapers Golden Pen of Freedom Award in 1978Memorials EditDonald Woods Gardens A street in Tolworth Surrey Donald Woods Foundation An NGO assisting the South African National Department of Health in the management and treatment of HIV AIDS in rural populations Works EditAsking for Trouble The Autobiography of a Banned Journalist Atheneum 1981 ISBN 978 0 689 11159 4 South African Dispatches Letters to My Countrymen Penguin 1987 ISBN 978 0 14 010080 8 Biko Paddington Press 1978 ISBN 978 0 8050 1899 8 later edition published by Henry Holt New York 1987 Filming with Attenborough Rainbow Nation Revisited South Africa s Decade of Democracy Andre Deutsch 2000 ISBN 978 0 233 99830 5 See also EditList of people who took refuge in a diplomatic missionReferences Edit a b Richard Aldrich 2006 Lessons from history of education the selected works of Richard Aldrich London Routledge ISBN 9780415358910 OCLC 58600047 Asking for Trouble Autobiography of a Banned Journalist by Donald Woods Peter Smith 1991 Williams Glyn The History of the Daily Dispatch dispatchlive co za Retrieved 16 September 2015 Tuttle K 2010 Soweto South Africa In Henry Louis Gates Jr Kwame Anthony Appiah eds Encyclopedia of Africa Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195337709 16 June 1976 Student Uprising in Soweto africanhistory about com Harrison David 1983 The White Tribe of Africa University of California Press p 290 ISBN 978 0 520 05066 2 1978 Newspaper editor flees South Africa On This Day 1 January BBC Blandy Fran 31 December 2007 SA editor s escape from apartheid 30 years on Mail amp Guardian Retrieved 18 February 2016 Uys Stanley 20 August 2001 Obituary Donald Woods The Guardian Retrieved 11 July 2016 Donald Woods obituary The Daily Telegraph 20 August 2001 Retrieved 11 July 2016 Donald Woods who cried for freedom died on August 19th aged 67 The Economist 23 August 2001 Retrieved 11 July 2016 Hain Peter 22 May 2013 Wendy Woods obituary The Guardian London Who We Are Donald Woods Foundation 10 December 2015 Archived from the original on 21 December 2015 Johnny Vaughan on Radio X 20171128External links EditDonald James Woods South African History Online Donald Woods at IMDb Donald Woods 4 April 1988 speech at George Washington University on C SPAN 12 minutes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Donald Woods amp oldid 1122742345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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