Author: | Anthony Lupeke | ISBN: | 9781466956995 |
Publisher: | Trafford Publishing | Publication: | July 3, 2005 |
Imprint: | Trafford Publishing | Language: | English |
Author: | Anthony Lupeke |
ISBN: | 9781466956995 |
Publisher: | Trafford Publishing |
Publication: | July 3, 2005 |
Imprint: | Trafford Publishing |
Language: | English |
SAILASH T0A1AT0, in the Identity Virus, is a character whose rough-and-tumble life was unpredictable with personality traits. Sailash, a village young man, entangled in the prime of the youth left fir the city, very much wanted to be identified in society. In search of the identity, the virus was nagging and ravaged him of his pride because he was in haste of wanting to know who he was, what he was and where he was going to end. Through the search of a want to stand fast on this ignoble earth he found himself under the attention of a witchdoctor for lucky voodoo. At one time he landed into a nasty problem and contracted a sexually transmitted disease. Like a dog that eats its vomit, Sailash returned to what he shunned and later came to believe in it, identity. Enmeshed in the African traditional web, with culture that stood in as a nucleus giving people their collective personality for identity, Sailash had what he wanted most at his traditional wedding, IDENTITY. It was only then that he was at last cured of the disease, the Identity Virus.
SAILASH T0A1AT0, in the Identity Virus, is a character whose rough-and-tumble life was unpredictable with personality traits. Sailash, a village young man, entangled in the prime of the youth left fir the city, very much wanted to be identified in society. In search of the identity, the virus was nagging and ravaged him of his pride because he was in haste of wanting to know who he was, what he was and where he was going to end. Through the search of a want to stand fast on this ignoble earth he found himself under the attention of a witchdoctor for lucky voodoo. At one time he landed into a nasty problem and contracted a sexually transmitted disease. Like a dog that eats its vomit, Sailash returned to what he shunned and later came to believe in it, identity. Enmeshed in the African traditional web, with culture that stood in as a nucleus giving people their collective personality for identity, Sailash had what he wanted most at his traditional wedding, IDENTITY. It was only then that he was at last cured of the disease, the Identity Virus.