Amin's Soldiers
Author | : John Pancras Orau |
Publisher | : Waterside Press |
Total Pages | : 204 |
Release | : 2013-10-11 |
ISBN-10 | : 9781908162465 |
ISBN-13 | : 1908162465 |
Rating | : 4/5 (65 Downloads) |
Book excerpt: Following the fall of African dictator Idi Amin, remnants of his army were rounded-up and thrown in jail. John Pancras Orau, a member of Amins Ugandan Air Force was one of these men. He saw first-hand the privations, isolation, hunger and humiliation in what were little more than concentration camps. In this book he describes the uncertainty and arbitrary punishments thatalongside fear that prisoners might just disappear were part of daily life. A true story of hope and belief, Amins Soldiers is a masterpiece of tragicomic writing falling somewhere between Catch 22 and Animal Farm as The Chieftan and his Brains Trust of fellow inmates try to govern themselves against a backdrop of prison gossip, rumour, misinformation and ever-changing rules. Yet it is not without a rich vein of humour as prisoners set up shops, cafes, entertainment, salvage teams and work on dubious escape plans. Equally comical are the ruses, subterfuge and corruption that become endemic as guards and prisoners seek to outwit each other. For more serious students of imprisonment, the book is about crime and punishment in a fluctuating political landscape about ordinary people whose only real offence was being left on the wrong side of history. It is also a true story of belief and survival.The book came about as a result of links between the Anglican Diocese of Winchester and the Church of Uganda. The last time I saw John Orau he was sitting in his tiny bookshop in Uganda wiling away his time reading. I asked how many he had sold today, he thought hard then answered, None. And yesterday? None, either. He was writing this book and his only ambition was to one day see it in print: Reverend Gordon Randall.