![]() The author of two novels for young adults, "What the Future Holds" and "Pains of a Maid," she hopes to continue her writing here, shedding light on problems that plague southern Africa but also giving young people "a feeling of hope." at Michigan State University in 1996, will teach Zulu at the Africana Studies and Research Center this semester - the first time the language has been offered since the early 1990s. Affiliated with Cornell's Center for Religion, Ethics and Social Policy, the organization provides sanctuary to writers in exile whose works have been suppressed. ![]() Mary's College in Notre Dame, Ind., before coming to Cornell this August as a visiting scholar in Africana studies and English and as a writer-in-residence for two years with Ithaca City of Asylum (ICOA). Granted asylum in 2005, she taught at St. In 2003 Mkhonza managed to make her way to the United States with her two sons. "I felt there were people who were asked to harm us." Hate mail and public attacks on her writing didn't stop Mkhonza from publishing in Swazi newspapers, but when her faculty office at the University of Swaziland was broken into and her computer and diskettes were stolen and destroyed in 2001, "I started to be afraid," she says. "I didn't attach writing to politics I just thought it was important to inform Swazis about certain simple things that can be harmful," says writer Sarah Mkhonza of her fictional stories that tell of violence against women and other injustices in her native country, Swaziland, the southeast African nation that is one of the world's last remaining absolute monarchies.
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