Religious rhetoric: The winning strategy for secular parties, ANC?
Perhaps religion in politics is the contemporary winning strategy for secular political parties within South Africa.
Perhaps religion in politics is the contemporary winning strategy for secular political parties within South Africa.
In its first public comments on Salman Rushdie’s stabbing, Tehran said no one had the right to accuse Iran over the incident.
If you’re planning to visit the emirate of Qatar to attend the FIFA World Cup, you’ll discover that the host is not a modern, liberal country.
Chuck Stephens, writing in his own capacity, brings us back to the lodestar of values that have withstood the vagaries of extremist politics over centuries.
“If every Christian commits to do their part, a new Christian Reconquest is not inconceivable. We have lost a lot of ground, but we can win it back.”
Pete van der Walt was surprised to discover just how useful Buddhism can be – in thinking, life and money.
Justin Welby entered the debate on the removal of statues by suggesting that the identity of Jesus as a white person needs examination.
Zuma has long been known as a man who lives beyond his means and this has made him a much-admired figure in the country’s neo-Pentecostal circles.
Deepak Chopra enthralled 2 900 in the Royal Festival Hall on London’s South Bank. His message is that humanity is being of a single whole. A bit like Ubuntu, hence something that resonates with many South Africans.
Jacob Zuma’s resignation speech was a classic seesaw event, very calculated from his end with no definitive ‘will he, won’t he’ resign until the end.