In 1975, Angola was tumbling into pandemonium; everyone who could was
packing crates, desperate to abandon the beleaguered colony. With his
trademark bravura, Ryszard Kapuscinski went the other way, begging his
was from Lisbon and comfort to Luanda--once famed as Africa's Rio de
Janeiro--and chaos.Angola, a slave colony later given over to mining and
plantations, was a promised land for generations of poor Portuguese. It
had belonged to Portugal since before there were English-speakers in
North America. After the collapse of the fascist dictatorship in
Portugal in 1974, Angola was brusquely cut loose, spurring the
catastrophe of a still-ongoing civil war. Kapuscinski plunged right into
the middle of the drama, driving past thousands of haphazardly placed
check-points, where using the wrong shibboleth was a matter of life and
death; recording his imporessions of the young soldiers--from Cuba,
Angola, South Africa, Portugal--fighting a nebulous war with global
repercussions; and examining the peculiar brutality of a country
surprised and divided by its newfound freedom.Translated from the Polish
by William R. Brand and Katarzyna Mroczkowska-Brand.