[Cecil Rhodes by Princess Catherine Radziwill]@TWC D-Link bookCecil Rhodes CHAPTER XIII 18/23
and to crown the work she has had the task of training Boer girls to nurse under her guidance.' "Ministers of religion are in residence, and schools under Mr.E.B. Sargant, the Educational Commissioner, are open for boys and girls. Children have been reunited to parents, except that some girls, through Miss Hobhouse's kind efforts, have been moved away from the Camps altogether into boarding schools.
Even in this Bloemfontein Camp, notwithstanding all that Miss Hobhouse says of the absence of soap and the scarcity of water, she is able to write: 'All the tents I have been in are exquisitely neat and clean, except two, and they are ordinary.' Another important admission about this Camp is to be found in the last sentence of the account of Miss Hobhouse's second visit to Bloemfontein.
She describes the iron huts which have been erected there at a cost of L2,500, and says: 'It is so strange to think that every tent contains a family, and every family is in trouble--loss behind, poverty in front, privation and death in the present--but they have agreed to be cheerful and make the best of it all.' "There can be no doubt that the sweeping together of about 68,000 men, women and children into these Camps must have been attended by great suffering and misery, and if they are courageously borne it is greatly to the credit of the sufferers.
The questions the public will ask, and will be justified in asking, are: "1.
Was the creation of these Camps necessary from the military point of view? "2.
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