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718 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1900
"Today, Kitchener is not remembered in South Africa for his military victories. His monument is the camp--'concentration camp', as it came to be called. The camps have left a gigantic scar across the minds of the Afrikaners: a symbol of deliberate genocide. In fact, Kitchener no more desired the death of women and children in the camps than of the wounded Dervishes after Omdurman, or of his own soldiers in the typhoid-stricken hospital of Bloemfontein. He was simply not interested. What possessed him was a passion to win the war quickly, and to that he was prepared to sacrifice most things, and most people, other than his own small 'band of boys', to whom he was invariably loyal, whatever their blunders."
"...It will always be remembered that this is the way British rule started there, and this is the method by which it was brought about."