Young africa
Top sales list young africa
South Africa (All cities)
Buy South Africa on World Sea Lanes - Young, George for R250.00
R 250
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South Africa (All cities)
Buy In South Africa - Francis Brett Young - Hardcover - 146 Pages for R45.00
R 45
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South Africa (All cities)
About the product a heavy copy, may require extra postage unless posted within South Africa. boards are shelf worn, chipped and knocked. foxing and marks. ownership inscriptions and stickers. annotations in text. fair copy.[SK]. Our orders are shipped using tracked courier delivery services.
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Johannesburg (Gauteng)
Africa has the youngest population in the world – a whooping 200 million youths which are between the ages of 15 years and 24 years.Its time that the youth arise and be listened to. Our Conference is seeking to help the young leaders work towards Agenda 2063.
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Johannesburg (Gauteng)
The book is about a rural girl Lucky Atlega “Sky” Molapo became a billionaire hip-hop Star after following her music talent from a young age. Even though her parents channelled her to become a teacher, she chose music. Sky inspired lot of young people especially from her village that you can become whomever you want to become in live. She started music in Primary School singing in a Choir. Her boyfriend taught her to play a guitar during college years and she started to play at the campus for students. One day she got a gig in a tavern next to the college playing on the Weekends and special occasions. She signed her first record deal when she was doing her last year at college and record her first album the following year. People knew she was a guitarist but were surprised when her first release was hip-hop album and the album was a hit. All of her albums were selling gold and platinum. She later parted with the record company to start her own label after she had a conflict with her boss. She continues rising to a billionaire doing big investments in South Africa and internationally but the success was short lived. Unknown gunmen killed her in front of the gate at her home. Police investigation stalled after they lack evidence that can lead to possible suspect but her legacy lived. You can buy the book on Amazon, link: httpswww.amazon.com/dp/B0CHZ1RHYC or read for free if you are a member of Kindle unlimited.
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South Africa (All cities)
About the product Brenthurst Second Series, number 2. Standard edition limited to 850 copies. Large 4to; original crimson cloth; laminated pictorial dustwrapper, housed in removable protector; tinted top edge; silk markers; pp. 275 + (i), incl. index; several reproductions of contemporary illustrations, in monochrome and full colour. Earlier owner's bookplate to front free endpaper. A few fox spots to fore-edge, else fine."The name of John Blades Currey (1829-1904) is seldom mentioned in histories of southern Africa. Indeed, the young Englishman who arrived at the Cape in 1850 made little direct impact on its story. He was nonetheless to become a profound influence on some of the Cape's most famous men and an astute chronicler of the political and social events of his time. His memoirs, published here for the first time, cover half a century of Cape history, from 1850 to 1900. Soldiering, farming, copper-mining - Currey tried all these; then, on the advice of governor Sir George Grey he joined the Cape civil service. While in its employ in the late 1860s he was entrusted with the task of introducing to a sceptical Europe southern Africa's first diamond, the'Eureka'. Later, as secretary to the government of Griqualand West, he chose the new name of' Kimberley 'for the burgeoning diamond-fields town of New Rush. But in 1875 Currey was blamed for the diggers'rebellion there, and this led to his dismissal from office and blighted his subsequent public career. While he was in Kimbeley Currey befriended two young fortune-hunters, both of whom were to become renowned premiers of the Cape: Cecil John Rhodes and John X. Merriman. To both of them Currey was to remain a lifelong friend and counsellor.. He is revealed in the account not as a politician but as a man who helped to shape politicians, not as a man who made history but rather as one who was passionately part of it. The manuscript forms part of The Brenthurst Collection, as do the majority of the contemporary illustrations which complement the text." Books: John Blades Currey 1850 to 1900: Fifty Years in the Cape Colony
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