Windhoek in the early 1960s: the 34-year-old politician Clemens Kapuuo
knocks at the door of the senior advocate Israel Goldblatt to solicit
advice regarding the myriad of difficulties encountered by Africans
daily under the apartheid regime. An unusual relationship and friendship
develops, one that transcends the racial divide in this South
African-governed Territory and will last for nearly 10 years. Meeting in
Goldblatt's chambers, at his home and in the Old Location, other
participants in the consultations included the veteran politician Chief
Hosea Kutako and a group of younger nationalists, among them Rev.
Bartholomews Karuaera and Levy Nganjone. Through Kapuuo, Goldblatt also
met Kaptein Samuel Witbooi and counselled the long-term prisoner from
Caprivi, Brendan Simbwaye. Israel Goldblatt's notes on these meetings
were discovered after his death and form the core of this book. They are
complemented by additional biographical information about his
interlocutors, and annotations that place his notes in their historical
and political context. Illustrated with many photographs, this
publication pays tribute to Israel Goldblatt and the Namibian
nationalists who attempted to build bridges where apartheid entrenched
racism and suspicion.