Abstract
This article is based on the findings of a qualitative study of second-generation exiles, who were born in exile and/or spent their formative years in exile during apartheid. It is based on in-depth interviews with forty-seven men and women who spent their childhoods in North America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, West Africa, East Africa, and southern Africa as second-generation exiles during apartheid. This article will focus on the tensions that arose over the myths and realities of return, in what often became dashed expectations of returning to a welcoming, free, and progressive post-apartheid South Africa, politically and socially united around key liberation principles. It will also discuss the manner in which the experience and memory of exile influenced former second-generation exiles' perceptions of their roles as agents of change in post-apartheid South Africa-roles that were often adopted in the name of an ongoing liberation struggle.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
De Sas Kropiwnicki, Z. O. (2014). The meeting of myths and realities: The “homecoming” of second-generation exiles in post-apartheid South Africa. Refuge, 30(2), 79–92. https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.39621
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