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![Speech by Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe to African Americans](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe gives a speech to African Americans living in Harlem, at a rally on Harlem Day, August 23, 1980. On the occasion of Zimbabwe’s admission to the United Nations, Mugabe thanks people for their support of Zimbabwe’s struggle for national independence and against colonial racist white rule. He celebrates the victory of the black man in Zimbabwe and the continued struggle for non-racialism and equality. He ends his speech with the hope that the victory of Zimbabwe will inspire the oppressed Africans in South Africa and Namibia.
![Hughes and Blues 5](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 7/30/1988Call Number: FI 267Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Lincoln Bergman, Chuy VarelaProgram: Freedom Is A Constant StruggleCollection: Freedom is a Constant Struggle
Poetry of Langston Hughes, partly built around a Rivers theme, including Hughes reciting his first published work, "I've Known Rivers," and his famous "Dream Deferred" poem, Paul Robeson singing Deep River, and marking the birthday of Mandela with the song "Cries."
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