NEW YORK (AP) — The thing about Nelson Mandela was that he made the rest of us want to be almost as noble as he.
Imprisoned for 27 years, the anti-apartheid leader who had declared
at his 1964 trial that he was willing to die for his beliefs in human
dignity and racial equality emerged from that experience not filled with
hatred, but courtly, magnanimous, humble and good-humored.
His very demeanor served as the rebuttal to all those who
peddled fear and foretold disaster and bloodshed should black South
Africans get the vote and take power in Pretoria.
It is easy to forget what a seething cauldron South Africa had become
by the early 1990s as part of its white minority struggled to hang on
to the three centuries of privilege made possible by apartheid. I
remember it vividly while covering the country's democratic transition
as AP's southern Africa bureau chief in Johannesburg in the mid-1990s.
Khaki-clad farmers with pistols at their side were setting off bombs
and pledging never to submit to majority
rule. The townships with their
shantytown poverty were ablaze with guns and violence as ANC activists
and backers of the government-encouraged and Zulu-dominated Inkatha
Freedom Party fought with terrifying ferocity. In Guguletu, outside Cape
Town, a young American Fulbright scholar Amy Biehl was chased down and
killed by a mob of youths shouting racial taunts of "Kill the farmer."
An anti-apartheid Communist leader, Chris Hani, was gunned down and
killed by a right-wing Polish immigrant.
The nation felt like a tinderbox, a stage set for a bloodbath.
But what Mandela ushered into history instead was his profound regard
for the rights of all South Africans to claim a share of the national
patrimony. It was a point he boldly made on almost every public
occasion, whether to householders in the white and affluent Johannesburg
suburb of Houghton or on a stage thrown up at a dilapidated football
stadium crammed to the rafters with township dwellers clamoring for
economic justice.
Through tedious and patient negotiations over several years after his
release from prison, the framework was set for the country's first
all-race elections in April 1994, even though almost until the last
minute it was not clear that all the conflicting parties would
participate. When the day finally dawned cold and clear, South Africans
saw themselves as the rainbow nation they really were. More than 22
million people voted, their lines snaking over the verdant green hills,
and it was evident to the majority that they were now, at last, full
citizens in the land of their birth.
Part of the privilege of being around Nelson Mandela in those days
was to see the undiluted joy he spread whenever he entered a township or
a small settlement in one of the dusty impoverished homelands set up by
apartheid governments to separate black from white South Africans.
As the cars carrying Mandela and his supporters jolted along the
rutted dirt tracks, they soon would be joined by school children running
alongside as fast as they could, shouting deliriously for "Madiba,
Madiba," the clan name that he is affectionately called. The stream of
onlookers would coalesce into a river and then a sea of humanity outside
whatever banner-draped venue had been chosen for his election rally.
Finally, when the cars could move no farther, Mandela with his trusted
aides would unfold himself from the vehicle and slowly walk through the
people, smiling and waving and occasionally raising his fist in an ANC
salute with a different brightly colored and patterned shirt on every
day.
Inside there would be dancing, swaying, ululating, cheering and
singing of his name, until he spoke in his unmistakable rasping voice,
his slow cadence lending gravitas to his message.
He could be firm with his followers, upbraiding them like a stern
uncle — saying they were embarrassing the cause when they tore down
posters of opponents or heckled members of the National Party of F.W. de
Klerk, his Nobel Peace Prize co-laureate and (to Mandela) little-loved
partner in South Africa's peaceful transition. "People will believe that
we are unfit for government," he would warn followers when they showed
any signs of hooligan behavior.
He was loyal as well to the Third World and to the Non-Aligned
Movement, the countries that had formed the anti-apartheid front. Even
when he was firmly embraced by the U.S. government, he would not forsake
his old revolutionary allies Yasser Arafat, Moammar Gadhafi or Robert
Mugabe — those who had befriended his cause at a time when the world's
richer and more powerful countries were still supporting apartheid South
Africa.
And he could be brutal with his political opponents. At the single
televised debate with de Klerk before the election, Mandela was so
scathing verbally, coming on relentlessly like the boxer he once was in
his youth, that many viewers felt sorry for the last white leader of
South Africa. And Mandela completely flummoxed him when he seized de
Klerk's hand for a unifying handshake at the end.
I met Mandela a few times at small group interviews during those
years, including on the morning after voting in his historic election
ended.
After his swearing-in for president on the steps of the rose-hued
government building in Pretoria, where an honor guard of South African
fighter jets roared overhead in formation trailing different colors to
salute to the nation's first democratically chosen leader, Mandela
slipped easily into the role of president. He faced a constant round of
hosting dignitaries and celebrities, chairing Cabinet meetings, and
traveling, leaving many day-to-day affairs to his ministers and to his
chosen political heir Thabo Mbeki.
In a meeting for a group of foreign journalists when he was then 77,
he recounted all the affairs of state and problems of the country that
were keeping him busy, but made clear nevertheless that he was still
energetic and still relishing the burden of leading his nation and
serving as an icon for Africa and for the cause of truth and
reconciliation everywhere.
"At the end of day, I have often felt that I have spent my time very
fruitfully," he told us with his typical understatement and a slight
twinkle in the eye.
Remembering now, and contemplating one man's long and momentous journey into history, I can only agree.
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