Startseite Geschichte 4 Manasseh of East Choiseul
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

4 Manasseh of East Choiseul

  • Edward Acton Cavanough
Weitere Titel anzeigen von Manchester University Press
Divided Isles
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Divided Isles

Abstract

Between 1998 and his death in 2000, Solomon Mamaloni, as opposition leader, forged an intimate bond with Manasseh Sogavare, appointing him deputy opposition leader and schooling him on history, politics and a fringe economic philosophy known as ‘social credit’. Sogavare was the last of five sons born to Solomon Islander parents in Oro Province of Papua. It may have begun as an alliance of convenience, but their time together, from October 1998 until Mamaloni’s death in January 2000, came to deeply shape Sogavare’s political and philosophical views. Mamaloni taught Sogavare about Solomon Islands history, shared his controversial economic philosophies, retold stories of his countless political scrums and conveyed his scepticism of outside influences on their island home. Sogavare’s deeply ingrained scepticism of foreign interference, inflamed by the RAMSI intervention, was embedded in his new social-credit party’s DNA, but failed to achieve its lofty goal.

Abstract

Between 1998 and his death in 2000, Solomon Mamaloni, as opposition leader, forged an intimate bond with Manasseh Sogavare, appointing him deputy opposition leader and schooling him on history, politics and a fringe economic philosophy known as ‘social credit’. Sogavare was the last of five sons born to Solomon Islander parents in Oro Province of Papua. It may have begun as an alliance of convenience, but their time together, from October 1998 until Mamaloni’s death in January 2000, came to deeply shape Sogavare’s political and philosophical views. Mamaloni taught Sogavare about Solomon Islands history, shared his controversial economic philosophies, retold stories of his countless political scrums and conveyed his scepticism of outside influences on their island home. Sogavare’s deeply ingrained scepticism of foreign interference, inflamed by the RAMSI intervention, was embedded in his new social-credit party’s DNA, but failed to achieve its lofty goal.

Heruntergeladen am 7.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7765/9781526178367.00012/html?lang=de
Button zum nach oben scrollen