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From the archives

Positively Shady

The glamorous activism of M.A.C Cosmetics

Muslim Pride

A timely LGBTQ memoir

Minor Hockey as Big Business

The disturbing shift from kids’ game to pricey investment

Uganda’s Endless War

Zealotry, child soldiers and the deeper roots of Joseph Kony’s 21-year rebellion

Blake Lambert

Stolen Angels: The Kidnapped Girls of Uganda

Kathy Cook

Penguin Canada

288 pages, softcover

The Wizard of the Nile: The Hunt for Africa’s Most Wanted

Matthew Green

Portobello Books

352 pages, hardcover

The cult-like insurgency of the Lord’s Resistance Army is the strangest war in postcolonial Africa. Growing out of Alice Lakwena’s militant Holy Spirit Movement, these northern-based rebels have fought the Ugandan government of President Yoweri Museveni since 1986. But barring Lakwena’s initial uprising, which may have killed 10,000 people, the LRA has never posed a substantial threat to Museveni's regime and to the bulk of the country’s population. In fact, the now-forgotten rebellion of the Allied Democratic Forces in western Uganda posed a greater challenge to the Kampala government.

What separates the LRA from movements on the continent is its enigmatic leader Joseph Kony (pronounced Co’yn). A member of the Acholi ethnic group, he was born in the early 1960s in Odek in Gulu district. Kony is a former Catholic altar boy who ended his formal schooling at a young age and became a witch doctor. He allegedly has the ability to heal people, and friends describe him as...

Blake Lambert, a former foreign correspondent who covered East and West Africa, teaches globalization at Humber College.

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