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  1. A synopsis of Alan Paton's novel about the Reverend Stephen Kumalo's journey to Johannesburg to find his son and his sister, and his encounter with racial and economic injustice. The novel explores the themes of loss, redemption, and reconciliation through the characters of Kumalo, James Jarvis, and Arthur Jarvis.

    • Plot
    • Synopsis
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    • Trial
    • Aftermath
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    In Ndotsheni, South Africa, Stephen Kumalo, a church parson, receives a letter from a minister in Johannesburg, Theophilus Msimangu, telling him that Stephens sister Gertrude is ill. Stephen decides to take his money, once saved to send his son Absalom to attend school, and go to Johannesburg to retrieve her. Additionally, he decides to seek out Ab...

    Stephen journeys to Johannesburg for the first time, and he is overwhelmed by the experience. He eventually connects with Msimangu and other men of the cloth, where they assure him they will take him to his sister. The next morning, they seek out Gertrude and find her. She agrees to come back with Stephen. Stephen locates his brother John, who has ...

    Meanwhile, back in Ndotsheni, James Jarvis and his wife receive news of their sons murder. The distraught couple flies to Johannesburg. Like Stephen with Absalom, James struggles with the fact that he never really knew his son, and his sons life and work was a mystery to him. When he goes through his sons office, James is struck by his sons activis...

    Soon thereafter, Absaloms trial begins. The two men arrested with Absalom, including John's son, claim they were not at the scene of the murder. Absalom admits to his presence, but denies he planned to kill Arthur. During the trial, Stephen comes to the doorstep of where James is staying quite by accident, seeking out another missing woman from his...

    The girl and Absalom are married after the trial. Stephen tells Absalom he has to return home. He, the Jarvis family, Gertrude and her child, and his sons now-wife all return home.

    A church parson, Stephen Kumalo, travels to Johannesburg to find his missing son, Absalom, who is accused of murdering a white man. He also meets James Jarvis, the father of the victim, and learns about their different worlds and perspectives.

  2. Learn about the plot, themes, and characters of Alan Paton's novel set in apartheid South Africa. Find summaries, analysis, quotes, and study tools for Cry, the Beloved Country.

  3. Cry, the Beloved Country is a 1948 novel by South African writer Alan Paton. Set in the prelude to apartheid in South Africa, it follows a black village priest and a white farmer who must deal with news of a murder.

    • Alan Paton
    • 1948
  4. Hailed as one of the greatest South African novels, Cry, the Beloved Country was first published in the United States, bringing international attention to South Africas tragic history. It tells the story of a father’s journey from rural South Africa to and through the city of Johannesburg in search of his son.

  5. Cry, the Beloved Country Summary. Stephen Kumalo, the pastor at the village of Ndotsheni in the Ixopo region of South Africa, receives a letter from the Reverend Theophilus Msimangu that requests that he go to Johannesburg to rescue his sister, Gertrude, who is very ill.

  6. A novel by Alan Paton about a Zulu clergyman's search for his son and his involvement in the struggle for black rights in South Africa. The title expresses the author's lament for the country's violence, racism, and injustice.