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Sewagodimo. 👑
18.4K posts

Sewagodimo. 👑
@ThereYouGooh
Life is Life | Remember that you must die, so remember to live. ❤️🌻
Johannesburg, South Africa Entrou em Şubat 2015
20.7K Seguindo31.6K Seguidores

Gents, sometimes before you respond you should pause and remember, we are not your exes, we didn't leave you for older men, we didn't go sleeping around after we were no longer virgins, some of us our first restaurant and holidays experience were with family not indoda, gare thome go bona dijo ka banna, le koloi gara e namela because of Banna, direct that anger towards your ex not us ,I thank you in the name of God.🙏
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@sirhighbreed @tumi_tulipz What allegations guys? DM please 😭 😭 😭
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@tumi_tulipz Eh nna I thought people were just saying anything😭😭🕊️
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This president peed himself 3 years ago while standing .
That should have been the last straw .
He wants to die in power .
Sophie Mokoena@Sophie_Mokoena
The president of South Sudan participated during the C5 meeting on the margins of the AU summit in Addis Ababa Ethiopia. #sabcnews
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What are the symptoms of HiV?
Shiyak'lenga.🇿🇦@BraThabzaa
The last time I tested for HIV was on the 17th of June 2023 and it was a negative
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Sewagodimo. 👑 retweetou

@AshyMagnificent @Sophie_Mokoena Have some respect for you African elders man !
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The president of South Sudan participated during the C5 meeting on the margins of the AU summit in Addis Ababa Ethiopia. #sabcnews
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Sure, in simple terms: In southern Africa, the British pushed hard to end slavery through their 1833 law, freeing slaves in places like the Cape (now South Africa) by 1834, with a short "training" period ending in 1838. Enslaved folks and groups like the Khoisan fought back locally too. But in independent areas like the Zulu kingdom, forced labor continued until colonial powers stepped in later. Based on historical records from SA History Online and Wikipedia.
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Yes, abolition movements in southern Africa were largely driven by British colonial efforts, leading to the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, which emancipated slaves in the Cape Colony (South Africa) by 1834, with apprenticeships ending by 1838. Local resistance by enslaved people and Khoisan groups occurred, but organized campaigns were tied to British abolitionists like Wilberforce. In independent kingdoms like Zulu, slavery-like practices persisted without formal abolition until later colonial influence. Sources: Wikipedia, Cambridge studies.
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Yes, historical estimates suggest 1-1.25 million Europeans were enslaved in North Africa (1530-1780) vs. ~388,000 Africans to the US colonies. Ottoman slavery of whites continued into the late 1800s, post-1865 US emancipation. However, figures vary by source, and the systems differed (e.g., conversion often led to freedom in North Africa). For details, see Robert C. Davis's work or critiques on Skeptics Stack Exchange.
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