Thursday, December 5, 2013

A GREAT MAN DIES....NELSON MANDELA

Nelson Mandela, 20th century colossus, dies at 95

 
 

 
South African President Jacob Zuma made the announcement at a news conference late on Thursday, saying "we've lost our greatest son."
JOHANNESBURG— Nelson Mandela, who became one of the world's most beloved statesmen and a colossus of the 20th century when he emerged from 27 years in prison to negotiate an end to white minority rule in South Africa, has died. He was 95.
South African President Jacob Zuma made the announcement at a news conference late Thursday, saying "we've lost our greatest son."
His death closed the final chapter in South Africa's struggle to cast off apartheid, leaving the world with indelible memories of a man of astonishing grace and good humor. Rock concerts celebrated his birthday. Hollywood stars glorified him on screen. And his regal bearing, graying hair and raspy voice made him instantly recognizable across the globe.
As South Africa's first black president, the ex-boxer, lawyer and prisoner No. 46664 paved the way to racial reconciliation with well-chosen gestures of forgiveness. He lunched with the prosecutor who sent him to jail, sang the apartheid-era Afrikaans anthem at his inauguration, and traveled hundreds of miles to have tea with the widow of Hendrik Verwoerd, the prime minister at the time he was imprisoned.
Related: President Obama mourns the death of Nelson Mandela
Gallery: Memorable moments in Nelson Mandela's life
Gallery: Nelson Mandela: South Africa's 'Father of the Nation'
His most memorable gesture came when he strode onto the field before the 1995 Rugby World Cup final in Johannesburg. When he came on the field in South African colors to congratulate the victorious South African team, he brought the overwhelmingly white crowd of 63,000 to its feet, chanting "Nelson! Nelson! Nelson!"
For he had marched headlong into a bastion of white Afrikanerdom — the temple of South African rugby — and made its followers feel they belonged in the new South Africa.
At the same time, Mandela was himself uneasy with the idea of being an icon and he did not escape criticism as an individual and a politician, though much of it was muted by his status as a unassailable symbol of decency and principle. As president, he failed to craft a lasting formula for overcoming South Africa's biggest post-apartheid problems, including one of the world's widest gaps between rich and poor. In his writings, he pondered the heavy cost to his family of his decision to devote himself to the struggle against apartheid.
Gallery: The history of apartheid in South Africa
Related: Mandela inspired music, movies, poems
He had been convicted of treason and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1964 for leading a campaign of sabotage against the government, and sent to the notorious Robben Island prison. It was forbidden to quote him or publish his photo, yet he and other jailed members of his banned African National Congress were able to smuggle out messages of guidance to the anti-apartheid crusade.
As time passed — the "long, lonely, wasted years," as he termed them — international awareness of apartheid grew more acute. By the time Mandela turned 70 he was the world's most famous political prisoner. Such were his mental reserves, though, that he turned down conditional offers of freedom from his apartheid jailers and even found a way to benefit from confinement.
Former South African president Nelson Mandela dies at age 95.Mandela is accompanied by his former wife Winnie, moments after his release from prison in this February 11, 1990 file photo.
"People tend to measure themselves by external accomplishments, but jail allows a person to focus on internal ones; such as honesty, sincerity, simplicity, humility, generosity and an absence of variety," Mandela says in one of the many quotations displayed at the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg. "You learn to look into yourself."
Thousands died, were tortured and were imprisoned in the decades-long struggle against apartheid, so that when Mandela emerged from prison in 1990, smiling and waving to the crowds, the image became an international icon of freedom to rival the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Related: Nelson Mandela's most famous speech
South Africa's white rulers had portrayed Mandela as the spearhead of a communist revolution and insisted that black majority rule would usher in the chaos and bloodshed that had beset many other African countries as they shook off colonial rule.
Yet since apartheid ended, South Africa has held four parliamentary elections and elected three presidents, always peacefully, setting an example on a continent where democracy is still new and fragile. Its democracy has flaws, and the African National Congress has struggled to deliver on promises. It is a front runner ahead of 2014 elections, but corruption scandals and other missteps have undercut some of the promise of earlier years.
"We have confounded the prophets of doom and achieved a bloodless revolution. We have restored the dignity of every South African," Mandela said shortly before stepping down as president in 1999 at age 80.
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was born July 18, 1918, the son of a tribal chief in Transkei, one of the future "Bantustans," independent republics set up by the apartheid regime to cement the separation of whites and blacks.
Mandela's royal upbringing gave him a dignified bearing that became his hallmark. Many South Africans of all races would later call him by his clan name, Madiba, as a token of affection and respect.
Growing up at a time when virtually all of Africa was under European colonial rule, Mandela attended Methodist schools before being admitted to the black University of Fort Hare in 1938. He was expelled two years later for his role in a student strike.
Former South African president Nelson Mandela dies at the age of 95.Getty Images: Alexander Joe, AFP
South Africans light candles outside Nelson Mandela's home in Johannesburg on December 6, 2013.
He moved to Johannesburg and worked as a policeman at a gold mine, boxed as an amateur heavyweight and studied law.
His first wife, nurse Evelyn Mase, bore him four children. A daughter died in infancy, a son was killed in a car crash in 1970 and another son died of AIDS in 2005. The couple divorced in 1957 and Evelyn died in 2004.
Mandela began his rise through the anti-apartheid movement in 1944, when he helped form the ANC Youth League.
He organized a campaign in 1952 to encourage defiance of laws that segregated schools, marriage, housing and job opportunities. The government retaliated by barring him from attending gatherings and leaving Johannesburg, the first of many "banning" orders he was to endure.
After a two-day nationwide strike was crushed by police, he and a small group of ANC colleagues decided on military action and Mandela pushed to form the movement's guerrilla wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe, or Spear of the Nation.
He was arrested in 1962 and sentenced to five years' hard labor for leaving the country illegally and inciting blacks to strike.
A year later, police uncovered the ANC's underground headquarters on a farm near Johannesburg and seized documents outlining plans for a guerrilla campaign. At a time when African colonies were one by one becoming independent states, Mandela and seven co-defendants were sentenced to life in prison........

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AFTER  I  BELIEVE  IT  WAS  27  YEARS  IN  PRISON,  MANDELA  IS  RELEASED  AND  BECAME  THE  LEADER,  PRESIDENT,  OF  A  NEW  BLACK MAJORITY  SOUTH  AFRICAN  GOVERNMENT,  AND  A  NEW  SOUTH  AFTRICA.

HE  WAS  A  MAN  OF  EXCEPTIONAL  FORGIVENESS,  OF  UNIQUE  WISDOM  AS  HE  LED   A  NEW  SOUTH  AFRICA;  SOME  OF  THAT  WISDOM  IS  TO  BE  SEEN  IN  THE  SOUTH  AFRICAN  RUGBY  TEAM  MOVIE  "INVICTUS"  STARING  MORGAN  FREEMAN  AS  MANDELA  AND  MATT  DAMON  AS  THE  RUGBY  TEAM  CAPTAIN.  A  MUST  SEE  MOVIE  THAT  IN  A  CAPSULE  SHOWS  THE  WISDOM  AND  GREAT  CHARACTER  OF  ONE  OF  THE  MOST  OUTSTANDING  MEN  OF  THE  20TH  CENTURY

REST  IN  PEACE  BROTHER.  I  LOOK  FORWARD  TO  THE  AGE  OF  THE  GREAT  WHITE  THRONE  JUDGMENT,  WHEN  YOU WILL  RISE  IN  A  RESURRECTION  TO  LEARN  THE  TRUE  WAY  TO  SALVATION  AND  ETERNAL  LIFE.  I  KNOW  WITH YOUR  HUMBLENESS  AND  CHARACTER  OF  MIND,  YOU  WILL  EASILY  ACCEPT  THE  LIGHT  AND  TRUTH  OF  GOD'S  WORD  AND  ENTER  ETERNAL  LIFE  IN  THE  FAMILY  AND  KINGDOM  OF  GOD.  YOU  RAN  YOUR  RACE  WELL  WITH  WHAT  YOU  WERE  GIVEN  TO  DO  WHILE  ON  EARTH.  IT  WAS  A  PLEASURE  TO  KNOW  OF  YOU  AND  YOUR  WORK,  WHILE  I  SHARED  PART  OF  YOUR  LIFE  WHILE  YOU  LIVED  AS  AN  HONORABLE  AND  DECENT  MAN.
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