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The Plight of Modern Relationships and the Crisis it has Caused in the World
Coles
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The Plight of Modern Relationships and the Crisis it has Caused in the World in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $2.99

Coles
The Plight of Modern Relationships and the Crisis it has Caused in the World in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $2.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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In The Plight of Modern Relationships and the Crisis It Has Caused in the World, Joshua Mukalazi Kizito delivers a bold and unfiltered examination of how relationships have shifted from lifelong covenants to fragile contracts — and how that shift is destabilizing families, communities, and entire societies.
Drawing from cultural history, lived experience, and social observation, the author contrasts traditional marriage systems — where union was permanent and responsibility was absolute — with today's modern arrangements built on image, financial display, and short-term expectations. He explores how exaggerated introductions, financial pretense, and material showmanship create illusions that later collapse into resentment, mistrust, and separation.
At the heart of the book lies a hard question:
If relationships have become transactional, can they still sustain families?
In The Plight of Modern Relationships and the Crisis It Has Caused in the World, Joshua Mukalazi Kizito delivers a bold and unfiltered examination of how relationships have shifted from lifelong covenants to fragile contracts — and how that shift is destabilizing families, communities, and entire societies.
Drawing from cultural history, lived experience, and social observation, the author contrasts traditional marriage systems — where union was permanent and responsibility was absolute — with today's modern arrangements built on image, financial display, and short-term expectations. He explores how exaggerated introductions, financial pretense, and material showmanship create illusions that later collapse into resentment, mistrust, and separation.
At the heart of the book lies a hard question:
If relationships have become transactional, can they still sustain families?





















