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About Nehanda
Bandele, Asha. "Cuba's soul: the nation's spirit still thrives. Just ask the women." Essence. January 2003.
Brinkley-Rogers, Paul. "People on run finding selves at home abroad with Castro." The Miami Herald. March 10, 2001
"Nehanda Abiodun." The Talking Drum.
Kaplan, Dana "Tribute to Nehanda Isoke Abiodun." November 26, 2002.
Robinson, Eugene. [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47736-2004Jul13.html "Exiles" Washington Post Magazine. Sunday, July 18, 2004; Page W23.
Sokol, Brett. "Exiled in Havana." Miami New Times. September 7, 2000.
Winn, Scott. "No Homeless in Cuba: Cuba Holds Up a Mirror to the U.S., Reflecting Badly On Us All." Real Change News, Seattle's Homeless Newspaper.
By Nehanda
Abiodun, Nehanda. "Life Underground." BLU9. 2002.
Abiodun, Nehanda. "Havana's Jineteras." NACLA Report on the Americas. March 2001, v.34 i.5 p.24.
Affiliated Organizations
"Resistance: The Origin of Black August." Turning the Tide Culver City: Summer 2004. Vol. 17, Iss. 2, p. 7
More Info On Cuban Hip Hop
Cody, Canyon. Finding hip-hop in Havana." The Heights: The Independent Student Newspaper of Boston College. November 15, 2004
Alvarez, Luis M. CBS News | Cuban Hip-Hop Reaches Cross Roads | October 4, 2004. The same article is also available through the Havana Journal.
Olavarria, Margot "RAP AND REVOLUTION: HIP-HOP COMES TO CUBA: Afro-Cuban youth are building a movement around hip-hop—a revolution within the revolution." NACLA Report on the Americas. May/June 2002. Vol. 35, No. 6.
Robinson, Eugene. "The Rap Revolución." Washington Post. April 14, 2002.
Torrey, Nick. "Your Revolution: Beats, rhymes, and the politics of hip-hop in Cuba." Tin House.
Wunderlich, Annelise. "Underground Revolution: A male duo hoping to make it big, a female group breaking into the scene; coming of age in Cuban hip-hop." Colorlines Oakland: Oct 31, 2001. Vol. 4, Iss. 3, p. 34
Wunderlich, Annelise. "Cuban Hip-Hop, Underground revolution" Cubans 2001.