Whitey Ford
12-17-2023, 04:33 PM
And she was so horsefaced that she married a blind nigger.
https://i.ibb.co/8ck4H9g/132066065-ffffd7da-ec61-4c4b-b2b7-dcc2177f4c27-upload-jpg.webp
A white British missionary, Ruth Holloway, fell in love with a black Kenyan man, John Kimuyu.
John was in a "blind institute" where Ruth worked and when she announced they were getting married, she lost her job.
Now their daughter, Ndinda Kimuyu, has started writing a book about her mother's life story, which started in 1957 during incredibly different times.
https://i.ibb.co/F8zL7BT/132066009-e3d5a833-d3e8-4358-92be-862723c02048-upload-jpg.webp
Wow, what good looking offspring this pairing produced. :clarkson
Ruth was just 19 when she left for Kenya after growing up in the Nottinghamshire mining town of Kirkby-in-Ashfield.
The couple fell in love at what was a dangerous time in Kenya. The Kenya Land and Freedom Army, known as the Mau Mau, were fighting for independence from British colonial rule.
When the couple decided to tie the knot, Ndinda said her mother booked a boat back to the UK to inform her bosses and parents, only to be met with backlash when she arrived.
"It was a very big deal," she told the BBC. "During that journey, the Salvation Army decided to strip her of her job.
"She ended up buying a wedding ring, baked it in a cake and smuggled it by ship back to Kenya."
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-67732025
https://i.ibb.co/8ck4H9g/132066065-ffffd7da-ec61-4c4b-b2b7-dcc2177f4c27-upload-jpg.webp
A white British missionary, Ruth Holloway, fell in love with a black Kenyan man, John Kimuyu.
John was in a "blind institute" where Ruth worked and when she announced they were getting married, she lost her job.
Now their daughter, Ndinda Kimuyu, has started writing a book about her mother's life story, which started in 1957 during incredibly different times.
https://i.ibb.co/F8zL7BT/132066009-e3d5a833-d3e8-4358-92be-862723c02048-upload-jpg.webp
Wow, what good looking offspring this pairing produced. :clarkson
Ruth was just 19 when she left for Kenya after growing up in the Nottinghamshire mining town of Kirkby-in-Ashfield.
The couple fell in love at what was a dangerous time in Kenya. The Kenya Land and Freedom Army, known as the Mau Mau, were fighting for independence from British colonial rule.
When the couple decided to tie the knot, Ndinda said her mother booked a boat back to the UK to inform her bosses and parents, only to be met with backlash when she arrived.
"It was a very big deal," she told the BBC. "During that journey, the Salvation Army decided to strip her of her job.
"She ended up buying a wedding ring, baked it in a cake and smuggled it by ship back to Kenya."
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-67732025