May 3,2000 Focus Page 3 Women o f the Long March In Print By Lily Xiao Hong Lee & Sue Wiles Allen & Unwin; 1999 Upington By A ndrea Durbach A llen & Unwin; 1999 In May 1991, journalists, news crews, and human a cawntry I* gripp ed wttfc ctvM u a m t rights activists from around the A M ac k p aN c a a u n I* M t aU gM . W aaaty- world gathered in front of Pretoria’s Mva p aap la ara caavktaal a t M s m urder notorious Central Pri son to watch the release of 14 black by a legal tria l aud aaa South A fricans from Death Row. M m law yer» hl brutally I Upington is their story. It is also the n i l 1« Mie « ta r y a» U p in g to n story o f th eir fellow accused and the young white woman who becam e th eir A M O R IA O U R B A C M lawyer. It tells of a c o u n t r y undergoing vast change and the painful process of reconciliation with a savage past. It unravels a trial of personal and political complexity that ends in the assassination of one of the defense lawyers and the eventual exile o f another to Australia, a country coming to terms with its own history. Upington triggers the excavation of a private life and reveals the in extricable link betw een personal and political transformation, the challenge of choice and the ultim ate resolution that comes with ‘doing time’. IB Just seventeen when they became lovers, Mao’s second wife He Zizhen was condemned to a life o f loneliness after he tired of her. A strong young peasant who only wanted to be a soldier, Kang Keqing was called the Girl Commander. Married at seventeen to a man she didn’t know, the illiterate peasant girl Wang Quanyuan left him to fight alongside the Red rebels. This is the story, never before told in English, of these women, ithree of the thirty women who marched out of southern China 'with 85,000 soldiers of the Red Army on their famous Long March. He Zizhen and several other women gave birth along the way, only to be forced to leave their babies behind; Kang Keqing endured the same hardships as the men, shouldered arms and ifought alongside her male comrades; Wang Quanyuan fell foul o f party politics and was eventually captured by enemy Moslem cavalry. Drawing on published and unpublished sources, including ¡interviews, this is the moving story of one of the great events of 20'h century history. From the time of their early revolutionary (fervor when they harbored the same ideals, to the ordeal of the ILong March, and the very different reality they faced after the ¡success of Communism, this book ¡tells of the journey of the women who defied tradition to fight for their own liberation and the SPIM I M OUNTAIN CASINO W tL C O M G liberation of China. RAY CHARLES Featuring Famous Cajun Flavor! «gum Have your business seen, 3 Chicken Strips Regular Side ONLY Biscuit / S J 1 9 MAY 30, 2000 7 :0 0 P.M. II Doors open at 6 p.m. Ticket prices are $25 and $35 and are available at the Spirit M ountain box office, all Fred Meyer Fastixx locations or by calling I-800-992-TIXX. f» m ix e d CHICKEN I LC.SIDES • 7 BISCUITS f «* Priant (M * n d m « b rin i Ou n » » » « s *» * Void ritari prohibtlld Hoi solid «di tmy o#« Good oi portKipotHig Popsit* od» © 2 1 « » K EttHr>rtsis lot „n "** Offer expires May 31, 2000 SPIMI M O U N T A IN CASINO H w y, IS Grand Rondr . www.spint-fnounrain.com. N o one under 21. N o rounds or exchanges.