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Why We Live in Community: A Manifesto
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Editor’s Picks Issue 18
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The Sacred Bonds of Sound
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Making Music for Community
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A Man of Honor
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Wassily Kandinsky
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Giant Picnic
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Covering the Cover: The Art of Community
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The Art of Community
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Readers Respond: Issue 18
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Family and Friends: Issue 18
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I Did Not Leave
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Summer of the Tree House
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Warriors on Stage
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The Beauty of Belonging
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Insights on Beauty
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It Could Be Anyone
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All About Light
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Making a Work of Art
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The Business of the Artist
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The Creative Process
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Return to Appalachia
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Originally published on June 18, 2018.
Nelson Mandela, who would have turned one hundred this year, led one of history’s most powerful nonviolent movements to victory. But as the first post-apartheid elections approached in 1994, the democratic struggle threatened to spiral into an all-out race war, with well-armed white militias ready to fight to the death to stop black rule. Their leader was General Constand Viljoen, retired chief of South Africa’s military. Mandela knew he couldn’t avert a bloodbath on his own; somehow he would have to win over his archenemy. As they met secretly during those tense months, the mettle of these two men would determine the future of a nation.
As foreign correspondent for the Independent of London, John Carlin had a front-row seat as the drama unfolded, with access to leaders on both sides. This excerpt from Plough’s graphic novel Mandela and the General opens with Carlin interviewing General Viljoen at a Cape Town bar several years later.
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Marianne Galati
Can't wait to read this book!