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Let Not My Country Die

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In 1986, Credo Vusamazulu Mutwa—the chief sangoma of the Zulu nation in Africa, a traditional healer and one of the most revered high iSanusi prophets—had a vision that South Africa would collapse and throw the country into chaos, crime, starvation, rape, disease, mass murder, barbarism, and more. His visions and prophecies have become a harsh reality for his country, his continent, and the world.

Mr. Mutwa wrote this book as a call for us to pursue peace rather than resorting to violence and confrontation with those who choose it. He also aimed to reveal what lies beneath the violence, racism, and hatred that are harming and destroying his country. The world claims that apartheid ended in South Africa more than 30 years ago, but it never truly left. Instead, it is spreading, and life for South Africans is now worse than it was during the old apartheid years.

“There are very few countries on the vast African continent about which so much has been thought, spoken, and written,” said Mr. Mutwa. “There are very few countries in Africa, if not in the entire world, about which so much that is bizarre, amusing, nonsensical, and lurid has been poured out by the news media of both the West and the Communist Bloc, more than my country. There are few countries on earth about which so much is known and has been revealed, yet so much remains unknown.”

But the time to heal is about to expire. Read his chapters and accompanying essays on the rise of communism and jihadism, apartheid, violence, genocide, and the South African government’s attachment to the dark side.  Click on “Contents and Preface” in the Description.

Click here: Contents and Preface

Let Not My Country Die. The Harsh, Prophetic Reali ….
Mutwa, Credo and Shapiro, Joseph

Credo Vusamazulu Mutwa was born on July 21, 1921, at a place called Umsinga Ferry in KwaZulu-Natal (Zululand), South Africa. In the early chapters of his fourth book, Let Not My Country Die, he wrote about some of his early years that helped shape him into a figure known to millions worldwide.
In 1963, he was proclaimed a Sanusi-Sangoma (traditional healer) by his mother’s family. He was later proclaimed High iSanusi and Guardian of Tribal History and Tribal relics. Mutwa was a direct descendant of an unbroken line of Zulu High “isAngomas,” and his great-grandfather was the High isAngoma to the Zulu King, Dingane.
    Mutwa became the spiritual leader of the iSanusis, iNyangas, and Sangomas throughout the subcontinent and, as such, was recognized as the spiritual leader, a prophet, and philosopher of millions of black people.
Many black people referred to him as “our priest and guardian of our culture!” He was also regularly consulted as a traditional healer. Despite his position as a High iSanusi, Mutwa is known for his attempts to promote peace and reconciliation in South Africa. In the 1970s, he established a Traditional Museum Village in Soweto to reconnect black people with their cultural heritage.
His peace efforts were met with bitter opposition, and in 1976, he was forced to leave Soweto when his home was razed to the ground by radicals. He was directly involved in the Soweto riots of 1976 and attempted, in vain, to keep children away from the chaos and destruction.
   After spending some time in KwaZulu-Natal, he returned to Soweto, only to live a life of fear and threats from political activists. In December 1985, he left Soweto again and moved to Bophuthatswana, located near the eastern border of Botswana.
Credo Mutwa had also traveled extensively and was involved in research projects on culture and religion. As a result of his writing and prophecies, he had often been titled the “Homer of Africa!”
(Hardcover: August 1. Audio/Kindle: To be released. Softcover: To be released.)

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Description

 
Click here: Contents and Preface

The world claims that apartheid ended in South Africa more than 30 years ago, but it never truly left. Instead, it is spreading, and life for South Africans is now becoming worse than it was during the old apartheid years. The time to heal is about to expire. South Africa is an autocratic backsliding democracy, and is on the brink of a major collapse.

Credo Mutwa prophesied about South Africa’s future and its possible coming “Armageddon of Africa.” However, the African National Congress (ANC) and the communists labeled Mr. Mutwa as a supporter of old apartheid. They dismissed his belief that people of various cultures and religions should be free to be “apart” from other people, tribes, and religions, while still connecting to each other with love and support.

 

 

Let Not My Country Die. The Harsh, Prophetic Reali ….
Mutwa, Credo and Shapiro, Joseph

 

Mr. Mutwa said: “I call your attention to the sordid spectacle of what is happening in Soweto at this moment, and ask you whether what is happening in Soweto is in South Africa’s interests or not—especially in these days when conflict shows every sign of escalating in our country. I call on you to abolish the councils everywhere in South Africa and replace them with groups of people who would have the interests of their people at heart, and who would take an oath in public to run clean administrations in the Black townships.”

Indaba, with love, must start NOW. South Africa needs to become a country of self-governing states (well-governed states, like Florida and Texas in the USA), or through Balkanization, or become separate countries; otherwise, South Africa, forcing communism-jihadi to its people, will be forced it into a civil war, a starvation war, that will turn it into the worst “apart hate” place and the last one on the African continent.

Read Credo Mutwa’s 1986 book, his widely regarded prayer for South Africa, after the Introduction, the essays, and the forthcoming commented editions of his call to save our country, South Africa. The introduction, chapters, his recent prophecies, and the following essays will provide commentary to help you think deeply and consider the precise options. The chapters illustrate what South Africa was like during the era of “old apartheid” over 40 years ago. The commentary and essays compare those times to the current situation under what is referred to as “new apartheid,” which must be eliminated.

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Additional information

Authors

Credo Mutwa, Joseph Shapiro

Publisher

United Publishers International

Number of pages

350

Format

Paper Book, Hardcover