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   You are here: Home > Archives 2006 > Magazine N° 9 > 46664 on Robben Island, South Africa
Story and Photos by Cyrille Roger, France
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Cyrille Roger
Cyrille Roger

South Africa
There we go, I'm father for the first time. I must say that the delivery wasn't made without any pain. But thanks to the precious help of my two accomplices in this adventure, everything went smoothly. As for myself, the idea of creating a travel magazine had been pattering along in my head for quite some time now, about ten years I guess. In ... ...read more
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South Africa A few years ago South Africa was brought back into the international scene with the liberation of Nelson Mandela and his accession to power in this ...
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Travel journal
46664 on Robben Island
South Africa

Watching the spectacular view of Table Mountain sitting at the back of the ship to Robben Island, I could not stop imagining how, not so long ago, the prisoners must have felt when the Blouberg was taking them away from their life and families to serve their sentence in jail.

Robben Island lies about 11 kilometres north of Cape Town and has over the years become synonymous with the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa. This is where activists such as Nelson Mandela (cell number 46664), Walter Sisulu and Ahmed Kathrada among many others, were imprisoned because of their political views and protests against the apartheid regime. The island was once described by Nelson Mandela as "the harshest, most iron-fisted outpost in the South African penal system."

Robben Island which also means "Seal Island" has now become a National Museum and on 1 December 1999 was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. While attention has focused mainly on the Island's role as political prison and on the well-known prisoners held there, the 574 hectare area has been put to a variety of uses during the centuries, including as a pantry, hospital, mental asylum and military camp. Over the last four hundred years, prisoners and exiles have included slaves from Angola and West Africa, princes from the East, chiefs who resisted British colonial rule, lepers, the mentally disturbed and most recently, political opponents of the apartheid regime.

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