User:Leeannw1221/sandbox

Article Evaluation

This article (Slavery in Africa) is relevant because it goes through the many types of slavery and gives sources for each paragraph. This information is not out of date, I believe everything is current, with its latest source being from 2014. There are over 100 sources, some sources are less valuable than others, but there are more than enough good primary and secondary sources to account for the entirety of the article. The article was neutral in tone, with no biased information that I could find. I checked all sources to see if I could at least verify them all, and they all worked. However, it is marked as a start article, which it is considered still very incomplete and thus lacking information. It is a part of 4 Wiki-projects.

Abdallah received a Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology from the University of Missouri, Columbia in the United States in 1963. In 1967, she received a Diploma in Home Economics from the University of London (Queen Elizabeth College) in the United Kingdom.

Abdallah was the principal of Buhare College from 1969-1973.

It is said that Anna Abdallah was also important in the foundation of Mazimbu (highlight), which would later house a school, called Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College. Abdallah was a key component in Mazimbu's establishment; she'd planted a "friendship" tree there and was even said to drive there on occasion, seeing to it that Mazimbu was a place that was internationally recognized, placing it on the world map everywhere she went. It is also said that Abdallah became an ambassador for the ANC (highlight), a national liberation movement, because she'd championed for its cause and spread knowledge about its existence.

During Abdallah's time in the Ministry of Home Affairs, she approved of more land being utilized in Dakawa (hightlight?) for the purpose of creating more space for ANC peoples who had no educational connection to the institution being built in Mazimbu.