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dc.contributor.authorSAM RUGEGE
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-06T21:15:28Z
dc.date.available2023-03-06T21:15:28Z
dc.date.issued1979
dc.identifier.urihttp://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke/handle/11295/162936
dc.description.abstractInitial participation by the Basuto in the money economy in the early19 century was not through wage employment but through the selling of wool, mohair and their surplus of grain to South Africa. Basuto for a long time supplied the grain requirements of the free State and the Cape Colony and Lesotho came to be called ‘the granary of South Africa’ (Germond, 1967). The missionaries appear to have played a significant role in promoting this prosperity by encouraging the peasants to concentrate on more exportable products rice, wheat (in preference to sorghum), fruit and vegetables and, of course, the rearing of sheep and goats for wool and mohair. The missionaries also encouraged the use of the steel plough for efficient production and the use of the ox-wagon to facilitate transportation of their products. The missionaries encouraged earning money mainly because it enabled the Basuto to buy European clothing to look like good Christians, as well as to acquire a way of life practiced by the missionaries themselves
dc.publisherUON
dc.subjectMIGRATION FOR EMPLOYMENT PROJECT
dc.subjectLEGAL ASPECTS OF LABOUR
dc.subjectMIGRATION FROM LESOTHO TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN MINES
dc.titleWORLD EMPLOYMENT PROGRAMME RESEARCH
dc.typeResearch paper
dc.identifier.affiliationTHE NATIONAL UNIVERSITY
dc.identifier.affiliationROMA
dc.identifier.affiliationLESOTHO


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