Search Details

Word: tribalized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

When they married the next year, Seretse's despotic uncle, Tribal Regent Tshekedi Khama, joined forces with an embarrassed Labor government in a Windsor-like sequence of events that ultimately stripped Seretse of his chieftainship and forced him into a six-year British exile. Much of the pressure from the Labor side was exerted by then Commonwealth Relations Secretary Patrick Gordon-Walker, who was twice beaten for Parliament within the last year, partly on the color issue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bechuanaland: Walking the Tightrope | 3/12/1965 | See Source »

...Burma's countryside has been racked by 17 years of warfare anyway. Besides the Communists, the Burmese army is battling such dissident tribal groups as the predominantly Protestant Karens and the hill-dwelling, opium-smoking Shans. While the fighting has nowhere come close to the proportions of the Vietnamese war, any week's reading of Burmese newspapers makes the land seem less than idyllic. Recent examples: "Rebels" have damaged the railway between Mandalay and Lashio. Five armed rebels "who seemed to be Communists" carried off a village chief and shot him. A band of police escorting seven provision...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Burma: Strength Through Weakness | 3/5/1965 | See Source »

Sigauke used his travels for other purposes as well. In addition to his tribal language and his "native" Portuguese, he soon picked up English and most of the African languages of South Africa and the Rhodesias. More important, he and other young men living in and around Salisbury in Southern Rhodesia founded a liberation movement, the Democratic National Union of Mozambique (Udenamo). On his trips, he began actively organizing other Mozambicans living outside the country...

Author: By John D. Gerhart, | Title: Portrait of an African Revolutionary | 3/5/1965 | See Source »

...enemy of Ngendandumwe, who happened to be a member of the Bahutu tribe. For centuries the Bahutu had served the towering Watutsi aristocrats (some measure 7 ft. or more) as cattle-tending serfs on the alpine slopes of the former Belgian colony Ruanda-Urundi. Independence, in 1962, established a tribal equality of sorts, but both Bahutu and Watutsi quickly sought more than that. A Belgian-backed coup gave the Bahutu control of the new Rwanda government, while Burundi remained under a Watutsi king, Mwami Mwambutsa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Burundi: Down to Size | 1/29/1965 | See Source »

...regions, where sophisticated Yoruba leaders like to say, "We are the English of Nigeria, clever and diplomatic, no final commitments and always a foot in each camp." And despite its democratic facade, Nigerian politics is little more than a raw power struggle between two shifting alliances of regional and tribal parties: the ruling National Nigerian Alliance (N.N.A.), whose power base lies among the proud, haughty Hausa and Fulani peoples of the north, and the opposition United Progressive Grand Alliance (U.P.G.A.), which is strongest in the three territories of east and west...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nigeria: The Model Breaks Down | 1/8/1965 | See Source »

Previous | 563 | 564 | 565 | 566 | 567 | 568 | 569 | 570 | 571 | 572 | 573 | 574 | 575 | 576 | 577 | 578 | 579 | 580 | 581 | 582 | 583 | Next