<p>“This is a pathbreaking account of how Catholic sisters’ essential work in education and health care under apartheid politicized them, leading women to set the pace for growing Catholic opposition to apartheid.” - Meghan Healy-Clancy, author of <i>A World of Their Own: A History of South African Women's Education</i></p> <p>“Higgs brings to the fore the heretofore underrepresented story of the role that Catholic sisters played in South Africa’s struggle for liberation. This work is a major contribution, appropriate to audiences studying women's history, not just African or South African history, and issues of resistance, religion, and activism.” - Dawne Y. Curry, author of <i>Social Justice at Apartheid's Dawn: African Women Intellectuals and the Quest to Save the Nation</i></p>
Based on extensive oral history interviews with white and Black sisters as well as deep archival research, this groundbreaking book reveals a largely untold story, nested within the broader literature of women’s activism in South Africa. The result is a new perspective that expands and intensifies our understanding of a dramatic period during which individual actions, in the aggregate, contributed to social change.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1 Catholic Sisters in Southern Africa, 1849–1961
2 Embracing Change, 1962–1969
3 Education, White Sisters, and Black Sisters, 1970–1972
4 “Opening” Schools, 1973–1976
5 Embracing Risk, 1977–1984
6 Turning Point, 1985
7 Years of Fear and Resilience, 1986–1989
8 Transition to a New South Africa, 1990–1994
Conclusion
Note on Method
Notes
Bibliography
Index