Nelson Mandela
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (Xhosa pronunciation: [xoˈliːɬaɬa
manˈdeːla]; 18 July 1918 – 5 December 2013) was a South African anti-apartheid revolutionary, politician and philanthropist who
served as President of South Africa from 1994
to 1999. He was the first black South African to hold the office, and the first
elected in a fully representative democratic election. His government focused on
dismantling the legacy of apartheid through tackling
institutionalised racism, poverty and inequality, and fostering racial
reconciliation. Politically an African nationalist and democratic socialist, he served as President of the African National
Congress (ANC) from 1991 to 1997. Internationally, Mandela was Secretary General of the Non-Aligned Movement from
1998 to 1999.
A Xhosa born to the Thembu royal
family, Mandela attended the Fort Hare University and the University of Witwatersrand, where he
studied law. Living in Johannesburg, he became involved in anti-colonial politics,
joining the ANC and becoming a founding member of its Youth League. After the South African National Party came
to power in 1948, he rose to prominence in the ANC's 1952 Defiance
Campaign, was appointed superintendent of the organisation's Transvaal chapter and presided over the
1955 Congress of the People. Working as a
lawyer, he was repeatedly arrested for seditious activities and, with the ANC
leadership, was unsuccessfully prosecuted in the Treason Trial from
1956 to 1961. Although initially committed to non-violent protest, he
co-founded the militant Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK)
in 1961 in association with the South African Communist Party, leading asabotage campaign
against the apartheid government. In 1962 he was arrested, convicted of
conspiracy to overthrow the government, and sentenced to life imprisonment in
the Rivonia Trial.
Mandela served 27 years in prison, initially on Robben Island,
and later in Pollsmoor Prison and Victor Verster Prison. An international
campaign lobbied for his release, which was granted in 1990 amid escalating
civil strife. Mandela published his autobiography and opened negotiations
with President F.W. de Klerk to abolish apartheid and
establish multiracial elections in 1994,
in which he led the ANC to victory. As South Africa's first black president Mandela formed a Government of National Unity in
an attempt to defuse racial tension. He also promulgated a new constitution and created the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to investigate past human rights abuses.
Continuing the former government's liberal economic policy, his administration
introduced measures to encourage land reform,
combat poverty, and expand healthcare services. Internationally, he acted as
mediator between Libya and the United Kingdom in the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial, and
oversaw military
intervention in Lesotho. He declined to run for a second term, and
was succeeded by his deputy, Thabo Mbeki.
Mandela subsequently became an elder statesman, focusing on charitable work in
combating poverty and HIV/AIDS through the Nelson Mandela Foundation.
Mandela was a controversial figure for much of his life. Denounced as a Marxist terrorist by
some US conservatives,[1][2] he
nevertheless gained international acclaim for his activism, having received more than 250 honours,
including the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize, the US Presidential Medal of Freedom, the
Soviet Order of Lenin and the Bharat Ratna.
He is held in deep respect within South Africa, where he is often referred to
by his Xhosa clan name, Madiba, or as Tata ("Father");
he is often described as "the father of the nation".
Early life
Childhood: 1918–1936
Mandela was born on 18 July 1918 in the village of Mvezo in Umtatu,
then a part of South Africa's Cape Province.[3] Given
the forename Rolihlahla, a Xhosa term colloquially meaning
"troublemaker",[3] in
later years he became known by his clan name, Madiba.[4] His patrilineal great-grandfather, Ngubengcuka,
was ruler of the Thembu people in the Transkeian
Territories of South Africa's modern Eastern Cape province.[5] One
of this king's sons, named Mandela, became Nelson's grandfather and
the source of his surname.[6] Because
Mandela was only the king's child by a wife of the Ixhiba clan, a so-called
"Left-Hand House", the descendants of his cadet branch of
the royal family were morganatic, ineligible to inherit the throne but
recognized as hereditary royal councillors.[6] His
father, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa, was a local chief and
councillor to the monarch; he had been appointed to the position in 1915, after
his predecessor was accused of corruption by a governing white magistrate.[7] In
1926, Gadla, too, was sacked for corruption, but Nelson would be told that he
had lost his job for standing up to the magistrate's unreasonable demands.[8] A
devotee of the god Qamata,[9] Gadla
was a polygamist,
having four wives, four sons and nine daughters, who lived in different
villages. Nelson's mother was Gadla's third wife, Nosekeni Fanny, who was
daughter of Nkedama of the Right Hand House and a member of the amaMpemvu clan
of Xhosa.[10]
"No one in my family had ever attended school [...] On the first day
of school my teacher, Miss Mdingane, gave each of us an English name. This was
the custom among Africans in those days and was undoubtedly due to the British
bias of our education. That day, Miss Mdingane told me that my new name was
Nelson. Why this particular name I have no idea."
— Mandela, 1994.[11]
Later stating that his early life was dominated by "custom, ritual and
taboo",[12] Mandela
grew up with two sisters in his mother's kraal in the
village of Qunu,
where he tended herds as a cattle-boy, spending much time outside with other
boys.[13] Both
his parents were illiterate, but being a devout Christian, his mother sent him
to a local Methodist school when he was about seven. Baptised a
Methodist, Mandela was given the English forename of "Nelson" by his
teacher.[14] When
Mandela was about nine, his father came to stay at Qunu, where he died of an
undiagnosed ailment which Mandela believed to be lung disease.[15] Feeling
"cut adrift", he later said that he inherited his father's
"proud rebelliousness" and "stubborn sense of fairness".[16]
His mother took Mandela to the "Great Place" palace at
Mqhekezweni, where he was entrusted under the guardianship of
Thembu regent, Chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo. Although he
would not see his mother again for many years, Mandela felt that Jongintaba and
his wife Noengland treated him as their own child, raising him alongside their
son Justice and daughter Nomafu.[17] As
Mandela attended church services every Sunday with his guardians, Christianity
became a significant part of his life.[18] He
attended a Methodist mission school located next to the palace, studying
English, Xhosa, history and geography.[19] He
developed a love of African history, listening to the tales told by elderly
visitors to the palace, and becoming influenced by the anti-imperialist
rhetoric of Chief Joyi.[20] At
the time he nevertheless considered the European colonialists as benefactors,
not oppressors.[21] Aged
16, he, Justice and several other boys travelled to Tyhalarha to undergo the circumcision ritual
that symbolically marked their transition from boys to men; the rite over, he
was given the name Dalibunga.[22]
Clarkebury, Healdtown, and Fort Hare: 1936–1940
Mandela, around 1937
Intending to gain skills needed to become a privy councillor for the Thembu
royal house, Mandela began his secondary education at Clarkebury Boarding
Institute in Engcobo,
a Western-style institution that was the largest school for black Africans in Thembuland.[23] Made
to socialise with other students on an equal basis, he claimed that he lost his
"stuck up" attitude, becoming best friends with a girl for the first
time; he began playing sports and developed his lifelong love of gardening.[24] Completing
his Junior Certificate in two years,[25] in
1937 he moved to Healdtown, the Methodist college in Fort Beaufort attended
by most Thembu royalty, including Justice.[26] The
headmaster emphasised the superiority of English culture and government, but
Mandela became increasingly interested in native African culture, making his
first non-Xhosa friend, a Sotho language-speaker,
and coming under the influence of one of his favourite teachers, a Xhosa who
broke taboo by marrying a Sotho.[27] Spending
much of his spare time long-distance running and boxing, in his second year
Mandela became aprefect.[28]
With Jongintaba's backing, Mandela began work on a Bachelor of Arts (BA)
degree at the University of Fort Hare, an elite black institution
in Alice, Eastern Cape, with around 150 students.
There he studied English, anthropology,
politics, native administration, and Roman Dutch law in
his first year, desiring to become an interpreter or clerk in the Native
Affairs Department.[29] Mandela
stayed in the Wesley House dormitory, befriending his own kinsman, K.D. Matanzima,
as well as Oliver Tambo, who would become a close friend
and comrade for decades to come.[30] Continuing
his interest in sport, Mandela took up ballroom dancing,[31] performed
in a drama society play about Abraham Lincoln,[32] and
gave Bible classes in the local community as part of the Students Christian
Association.[33] Although
having friends connected to the African National Congress (ANC) and
the anti-imperialist movement who wanted an independent South Africa, Mandela
avoided any involvement,[34] and
became a vocal supporter of the British war effort when the Second World
War broke out.[35] Helping
found a first-year students' house committee which challenged the dominance of
the second-years,[36] at
the end of his first year he became involved in a Students' Representative Council (SRC)
boycott against the quality of food, for which he was temporarily suspended
from the university; he left without receiving a degree.[37]
Arriving in Johannesburg: 1941–1943
Returning to Mqhekezweni in December 1940, Mandela found that Jongintaba
had arranged marriages for him and Justice;
dismayed, they fled to Johannesburg via Queenstown, arriving in April 1941.[38] Mandela
found work as a night watchman at Crown Mines, his "first sight of South
African capitalism in action", but was fired when the induna (headman)
discovered he was a runaway.[39] Staying
with a cousin in George Goch Township, Mandela was introduced to the realtor
and ANC activist Walter Sisulu, who secured him a job as an articled clerk at
law firm Witkin, Sidelsky and Eidelman. The company was run by a liberal Jew,
Lazar Sidelsky, who was sympathetic to the ANC's cause.[40] At
the firm, Mandela befriended Gaur Redebe, a Xhosa member of the ANC and Communist Party, as well as Nat Bregman,
a Jewish communist who became his first white friend.[41] Attending
communist talks and parties, Mandela was impressed thatEuropeans, Africans, Indians and Coloureds were
mixing as equals. However, he stated later that he did not join the Party
because its atheism conflicted with his Christian faith, and because he saw the
South African struggle as being racially based rather than class warfare.[42] Becoming
increasingly politicised, in August 1943 Mandela marched in support of a
successful bus boycott to reverse fare rises.[43] Continuing
his higher education, Mandela signed up to a University of South Africa correspondence
course, working on his bachelor's degree at night.[44]
Earning a small wage, Mandela rented a room in the house of the Xhoma
family in the Alexandra township; although rife with
poverty, crime and pollution, Alexandra always remained "a treasured
place" for him.[45] Although
embarrassed by his poverty, he briefly courted a Swazi woman
before unsuccessfully courting his landlord's daughter.[46] In
order to save money and be closer to downtown Johannesburg, Mandela moved into
the compound of the Witwatersrand Native Labour
Association, living among miners of various tribes; as the compound
was a "way station for visiting chiefs", he once met the Queen Regent
of Basutoland.[47] In
late 1941, Jongintaba visited, forgiving Mandela for running away. On returning
to Thembuland, the regent died in winter 1942; Mandela and Justice arrived a
day late for the funeral.[48] After
passing his BA exams in early 1943, Mandela returned to Johannesburg to follow
a political path as a lawyer rather than become a privy councillor in
Thembuland.[49] He
later stated that he experienced no epiphany, but that he "simply found
myself doing so, and could not do otherwise."[50]
Revolutionary activity
Law studies and the ANC Youth League: 1943–1949
Beginning law studies at the University of Witwatersrand, Mandela was
the only native African student, and though facing racism, he befriended
liberal and communist European, Jewish, and Indian students, among them Joe Slovo, Harry Schwarz and Ruth First.[51] Joining
the ANC, Mandela was increasingly influenced by Sisulu, spending much time with
other activists at Sisulu'sOrlando house,
including old friend Oliver Tambo.[52] In
1943, Mandela met Anton Lembede, an African nationalist virulently opposed to a
racially united front against colonialism and imperialism or to an alliance
with the communists.[53] Despite
his friendships with non-blacks and communists, Mandela supported Lembede's
views, believing that black Africans should be entirely independent in their
struggle for political self-determination.[54] Deciding
on the need for a youth wing to mass mobilise Africans in opposition to their
subjugation, Mandela was among a delegation that approached ANC President Alfred Bitini Xuma on the subject at his
home in Sophiatown; the African National Congress Youth
League (ANCYL) was founded on Easter Sunday 1944 in the Bantu Men's Social Centre in Eloff
Street, with Lembede as President and Mandela as a member of the executive
committee.[55]
Mandela and Evelyn in 1944
At Sisulu's house, Mandela met Evelyn Mase,
an ANC activist from Engcobo, Transkei, who was training at the time to become a nurse.
Married on 5 October 1944, after initially living with her relatives, they
rented House no. 8115 in Orlando from early 1946.[56] Their
first child, Madiba "Thembi" Thembekile, was born in February 1946,
while a daughter named Makaziwe was born in 1947, dying nine months later of meningitis.[57] Mandela
enjoyed home life, welcoming his mother and sister Leabie to stay with him.[58] In
early 1947, his three years of articles ended at Witkin, Sidelsky and Eidelman,
and he decided to become a full-time student, subsisting on loans from the
Bantu Welfare Trust.[59]
In July 1947, Mandela rushed Lembede to hospital, where he died; he was
succeeded as ANCYL president by the more moderate Peter Mda, who agreed to
co-operate with communists and non-blacks, appointing Mandela ANCYL secretary.[60] Mandela
disagreed with Mda's approach, in December 1947 supporting an unsuccessful
measure to expel communists from the ANCYL, considering their ideology
un-African.[61] In
1947, Mandela was elected to the executive committee of the Transvaal ANC,
serving under regional president C.S. Ramohanoe. When Ramohanoe acted against
the wishes of the Transvaal Executive Committee by co-operating with Indians
and communists, Mandela was one of those who forced his resignation.[62]
In the South African general election, 1948,
in which only whites were permitted to vote, the Afrikaner-dominated Herenigde Nasionale Party underDaniel François Malan took power, soon uniting
with the Afrikaner Party to form the National Party. Openly racialist, the party
codified and expanded racial segregation with the new apartheid legislation.[63] Gaining
increasing influence in the ANC, Mandela and his cadres began advocating direct
action against apartheid, such as boycotts and strikes, influenced by the
tactics of South Africa's Indian community. Xuma did not support these measures
and was removed from the presidency in a vote of no confidence, replaced by James Moroka and
a more militant cabinet containing Sisulu, Mda, Tambo and Godfrey Pitje;
Mandela later related that "We had now guided the ANC to a more radical
and revolutionary path."[64] Having
devoted his time to politics, Mandela failed his final year at Witwatersrand
three times; he was ultimately denied his degree in December 1949.[65]
Defiance Campaign and Transvaal ANC Presidency: 1950–1954
The tri-colour flag of the African National Congress
Mandela took Xuma's place on the ANC National Executive in March 1950.[66] That
month, the Defend Free Speech Convention was held in Johannesburg, bringing
together African, Indian and communist activists to call an anti-apartheid
general strike. Mandela opposed the strike because it was not ANC-led, but a
majority of black workers took part, resulting in increased police repression
and the introduction of the Suppression of Communism Act, 1950,
affecting the actions of all protest groups.[67] In
1950, Mandela was elected national president of the ANCYL; at the ANC national
conference of December 1951, he continued arguing against a racially united
front, but was outvoted.[68] Thenceforth,
he altered his entire perspective, embracing such an approach; influenced by
friends like Moses Kotane and by the Soviet Union's
support for wars of independence, Mandela's mistrust of
communism also broke down. He became influenced by the texts of Karl Marx, Friedrich
Engels, Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalinand Mao Zedong,
and embraced dialectical materialism.[69] In
April 1952, Mandela began work at the H.M. Basner law firm,[70] though
his increasing commitment to work and activism meant he spent less time with
his family.[71]
In 1952, the ANC began preparation for a joint Defiance
Campaign against apartheid with Indian and communist groups,
founding a National Voluntary Board to recruit volunteers. Deciding on a path
of nonviolent resistance influenced by Mahatma Gandhi, some considered it the
ethical option, but Mandela instead considered it pragmatic.[72] At
a Durban rally
on 22 June, Mandela addressed an assembled crowd of 10,000, initiating the
campaign protests, for which he was arrested and briefly interned in Marshall
Square prison.[73] With
further protests, the ANC's membership grew from 20,000 to 100,000; the
government responded with mass arrests, introducing the Public Safety Act, 1953 to permit martial law.[74] In
May, authorities banned Transvaal ANU President J. B. Marks from
making public appearances; unable to maintain his position, he recommended
Mandela as his successor. Although the ultra-Africanist Bafabegiya group
opposed his candidacy, Mandela was elected regional president in October.[75]On
30 July 1952, Mandela was arrested under the Suppression of Communism Act and
stood trial as a part of the 21 accused – among them Moroka, Sisulu and Dadoo –
in Johannesburg. Found guilty of "statutory communism", their
sentence of nine months' hard labour was suspended for two years.[76] In
December, Mandela was given a six-month ban from attending meetings or talking
to more than one individual at a time, making his Transvaal ANU presidency
impractical. The Defiance Campaign meanwhile petered out.[77] In
September 1953, Andrew Kunene read out Mandela's "No Easy Walk to
Freedom" speech at a Transvaal ANC meeting; the title was taken from a
quote by Indian independence leader Jawaharlal
Nehru, a seminal influence on Mandela's thought. The speech laid out
a contingency plan for a scenario in which the ANC was banned. This Mandela
Plan, or M-Plan, involved dividing the organisation into a cell structure with
a more centralised leadership.[78]
Mandela obtained work as an attorney for the firm Terblanche and Briggish,
before moving to the liberal-run Helman and Michel, passing qualification exams
to become a full-fledged attorney.[79] In
August 1953, Mandela and Oliver Tambo opened their own law firm, Mandela and
Tambo, operating in downtown Johannesburg. The only African-run law
firm in the country, it was popular with aggrieved blacks, often dealing with
cases of police brutality. Disliked by the authorities, the firm was forced to
relocate to a remote location after their office permit was removed under the Group Areas Act;
as a result, their custom dwindled.[80] Though
a second daughter, Makaziwe Phumia, was born in May 1954, Mandela's
relationship with Evelyn became strained, and she accused him of adultery.
Evidence has emerged indicating that he was having affairs with ANC member Lillian Ngoyi and
secretary Ruth Mompati; persistent but unproven claims assert that the latter
bore Mandela a child. Disgusted by her son's behaviour, Nosekeni returned to
Transkei, while Evelyn embraced the Jehovah's Witnesses and rejected Mandela's
obsession with politics.[81]
Congress of the People and the Treason Trial: 1955–1961
Main article: Treason Trial
"We, the people of South Africa, declare for all our country and the
world to know:
That South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white, and that no
government can justly claim authority unless it is based on the will of the
people."
— The opening of the Freedom Charter[82]
Mandela came to the opinion that the ANC "had no alternative to armed
and violent resistance" after taking part in the unsuccessful protest to
prevent the demolition of the all-black Sophiatown suburb of Johannesburg in
February 1955.[83] He
advised Sisulu to request weaponry from the People's Republic of China, but
while supporting the anti-apartheid struggle, China's government believed the
movement insufficiently prepared forguerilla
warfare.[84] With
the involvement of the South African Indian Congress, the
Coloured People's Congress, the South African Congress of Trade Unions and the Congress of Democrats,
the ANC planned a Congress of the People, calling on all
South Africans to send in proposals for a post-apartheid era. Based on the
responses, a Freedom Charter was drafted by Rusty Bernstein,
calling for the creation of a democratic, non-racialist state with the nationalisation of
major industry. When the charter was adopted at a June 1955 conference in Kliptown attended
by 3000 delegates, police cracked down on the event, but it remained a key part
of Mandela's ideology.[85]
Following the end of a second ban in September 1955, Mandela went on a
working holiday to Transkei to discuss the implications of the Bantu Authorities Act, 1951 with
local tribal leaders, also visiting his mother and Noengland before proceeding
to Cape Town.[86] In
March 1956 he received his third ban on public appearances, restricting him to
Johannesburg for five years, but he often defied it.[87] His
marriage broke down as Evelyn left Mandela, taking their children to live with
her brother. Initiating divorce proceedings in May 1956, she claimed that
Mandela had physically abused her; he denied the allegations, and fought for
custody of their children. She withdrew her petition of separation in November,
but Mandela filed for divorce in January 1958; the divorce was finalised in
March, with the children placed in Evelyn's care.[88] During
the divorce proceedings, he began courting and politicising a social worker, Winnie Madikizela, who he married in Bizana on 14 June 1958. She later became
involved in ANC activities, spending several weeks imprisoned.[89]
The apartheid system pervaded all areas of life.
On 5 December 1956, Mandela was arrested alongside most of the ANC
Executive for "high treason" against the state. Held in Johannesburg
Prison amid mass protests, they underwent a preparatory examination in Drill
Hall on 19 December, before being granted bail.[90] The
defence's refutation began on 9 January 1957, overseen by defence lawyer Vernon Berrangé,
and continued until adjourning in September. In January 1958, judge Oswald Pirow was
appointed to the case, and in February he ruled that there was "sufficient
reason" for the defendants to go on trial in the Transvaal Supreme Court.[91] The
formal Treason Trial began in Pretoria in
August 1958, with the defendants successfully applying to have the three judges
– all linked to the governing National Party – replaced. In August, one charge
was dropped, and in October the prosecution withdrew its indictment, submitting
a reformulated version in November which argued that the ANC leadership
committed high treason by advocating violent revolution, a charge the
defendants denied.[92]
In April 1959, militant Africanists dissatisfied with the ANC's united
front approach founded the Pan-African Congress (PAC); Mandela's
friend Robert Sobukwe was elected president,
though Mandela thought the group "immature".[93] Both
parties campaigned for an anti-pass campaign in May 1960, in which Africans
burned the passes that they were legally obliged to carry. One of the
PAC-organized demonstrations was fired upon by police, resulting in the deaths
of 69 protesters in the Sharpeville massacre. In solidarity, Mandela
publicly burned his pass as rioting broke out across South Africa, leading the
government to proclaim martial law.[94] Under
the State of Emergency measures, Mandela and other activists were arrested on
30 March, imprisoned without charge in the unsanitary conditions of the Pretoria
Local prison, while the ANC and PAC were banned in April.[95] This
made it difficult for their lawyers to reach them, and it was agreed that the
defence team for the Treason Trial should withdraw in protest. Representing
themselves in court, the accused were freed from prison when the state of
emergency was lifted in late August.[96] Mandela
used his free time to organise an All-In African Conference near Pietermaritzburg, Natal, in March, at which 1,400 anti-apartheid
delegates met, agreeing on a stay-at home protest to mark 31 May, the day South
Africa became a republic.[97] On
29 March 1961, after a six-year trial, the judges produced a verdict of not
guilty, embarrassing the government.[98]
Umkhonto we Sizwe and African tour: 1961–1962
The thatched room at Liliesleaf Farm, where Mandela hid
Disguising himself as a chauffeur, Mandela travelled the country incognito,
organising the ANC's new cell structure and a mass stay-at-home strike for 29
May. Referred to as the "Black Pimpernel" in the press – a reference
to Emma Orczy's
1905 novel The Scarlet Pimpernel – the police put
out a warrant for his arrest.[99] Mandela
held secret meetings with reporters, and after the government failed to prevent
the strike, he warned them that many anti-apartheid activists would soon resort
to violence through groups like the PAC's Poqo.[100] He
believed that the ANC should form an armed group to channel some of this
violence, convincing both ANC leader Albert Luthuli –
who was morally opposed to violence – and allied activist groups of its
necessity.[101]
Inspired by Fidel Castro's 26th of July Movement in the Cuban
Revolution, in 1961 Mandela co-founded Umkhonto we
Sizwe ("Spear of the Nation", abbreviated MK)
with Sisulu and the communist Joe Slovo. Becoming chairman of the militant
group, he gained ideas from illegal literature on guerilla warfare by Mao and Che Guevara.
Officially separate from the ANC, in later years MK became the group's armed
wing.[102] Most
early MK members were white communists; after hiding in communist Wolfie
Kodesh's flat in Berea, Mandela moved to the communist-owned Liliesleaf Farm in Rivonia,
there joined by Raymond Mhlaba, Slovo and Bernstein, who put
together the MK constitution.[103] Although
Mandela himself denied ever being a Communist Party member, historical research
has suggested that he might have been for a short period, starting from the
late 1950s or early 1960s.[104]
Operating through a cell structure, the MK agreed to acts of sabotage to
exert maximum pressure on the government with minimum casualties, bombing
military installations, power plants, telephone lines and transport links at
night, when civilians were not present. Mandela himself stated that they chose
sabotage not only because it was the least harmful action, but also "because
it did not involve loss of life [and] it offered the best hope
for reconciliation among the races afterward." He noted that
"strict instructions were given to members of MK that we would countenance
no loss of life", but should these tactics fail, MK would resort to
"guerilla warfare and terrorism".[105]
Soon after ANC leader Luthuli was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize, the MK publicly announced its existence with 57 bombings on Dingane's Day (16
December) 1961, followed by further attacks on New Year's Eve.[106]
The ANC agreed to send Mandela as a delegate to the February 1962
Pan-African Freedom Movement for East, Central and Southern Africa (PAFMECSA)
meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.[107]Traveling
there in secret, Mandela met with Emperor Haile Selassie
I, and gave his speech after Selaisse's at the conference.[108] After
the conference, he travelled to Cairo, Egypt, admiring
the political reforms of President Gamal Abdel Nasser, and then went to Tunis, Tunisia, where
President Habib Bourguiba gave him £5000 for
weaponry. He proceeded to Morocco, Mali, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia and
Senegal, receiving funds from Liberian President William Tubman and
Guinean President Ahmed Sékou Touré.[109] Leaving
Africa for London, England, he met anti-apartheid activists, reporters and
prominent leftist politicians.[110] Returning
to Ethiopia, he began a six-month course in guerrilla warfare, but completed
only two months before being recalled to South Africa.[111]
Imprisonment
Arrest and Rivonia trial: 1962–1964
Police shots of several people accused in the Rivonia Trial. The portrait
at the top is of Nelson Mandela, the chief accused. Photo in the lower
right-hand corner is Walter Sisulu
On 5 August 1962, police captured Mandela along with Cecil Williams near Howick.[112] Jailed
in Johannesburg's Marshall Square prison, he was charged with inciting workers'
strikes and leaving the country without permission. Representing himself with
Slovo as legal advisor, Mandela intended to use the trial to showcase "the
ANC's moral opposition to racism" while supporters demonstrated outside
the court.[113] Moved
to Pretoria, where Winnie could visit him, in his cell he began correspondence
studies for a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degree from the University of London.[114] His
hearing began on 15 October, but he disrupted proceedings by wearing a
traditional kaross,
refusing to call any witnesses, and turning his plea of mitigation into a
political speech. Found guilty, he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment;
as he left the courtroom, supporters sang Nkosi Sikelel iAfrika.[115]
"In a way I had never quite comprehended before, I realized the role I
could play in court and the possibilities before me as a defendant. I was the
symbol of justice in the court of the oppressor, the representative of the
great ideals of freedom, fairness and democracy in a society that dishonoured
those virtues. I realized then and there that I could carry on the fight even
in the fortress of the enemy."
— Mandela, 1994[116]
On 11 July 1963, police raided Liliesleaf Farm, arresting those they found
there and uncovering paperwork documenting MK's activities, some of which
mentioned Mandela. The subsequent Rivonia Trial began
at Pretoria Supreme Court on 9
October, with Mandela and his comrades charged with four counts of sabotage and
conspiracy to violently overthrow the government. Their chief prosecutor wasPercy Yutar,
who called for them to receive the death penalty.[117] Judge Quartus de Wet soon
threw out the prosecution's case for insufficient evidence, but Yutar
reformulated the charges, presenting his new case from December until February
1964, calling 173 witnesses and bringing thousands of documents and photographs
to the trial.[118]
With the exception of James Kantor,
who was innocent of all charges, Mandela and the accused admitted sabotage but
denied that they had ever agreed to initiate guerilla war against the
government. They used the trial to highlight their political cause; one of
Mandela's speeches – inspired by Castro's "History Will Absolve Me" speech – was
widely reported in the press despite official censorship.[119] The
trial gained international attention, with global calls for the release of the
accused from such institutions as the United Nations and World Peace Council. The University of London Union voted
Mandela to its presidency, and nightly vigils for him were held in St. Paul's Cathedral, London.[120] However,
deeming them to be violent communist agitators, South Africa's government
ignored all calls for clemency, and on 12 June 1964 de Wet found Mandela and
two of his co-accused guilty on all four charges, sentencing them to life
imprisonment rather than death.[121]
Robben Island: 1964–1982
The lime quarry at Robben Island
Mandela and his co-accused were transferred from Pretoria to the prison on Robben Island,
remaining there for the next 18 years.[122] Isolated
from non-political prisoners in Section B, Mandela was imprisoned in a damp
concrete cell measuring 8 feet (2.4 m) by 7 feet (2.1 m), with a
straw mat on which to sleep.[123] Verbally
and physically harassed by several white prison wardens, the Rivonia Trial
prisoners spent their days breaking rocks into gravel, until being reassigned
in January 1965 to work in a lime quarry. Mandela was initially forbidden to
wear sunglasses, and the glare from the lime permanently damaged his eyesight.[124] At
night, he worked on his LLB degree, but newspapers were forbidden, and he was
locked in solitary confinement on several occasions
for possessing smuggled news clippings.[125] Classified
as the lowest grade of prisoner, Class D, he was permitted one visit and one
letter every six months, although all mail was heavily censored.[126]
The political prisoners took part in work and hunger strikes –
the latter considered largely ineffective by Mandela – to improve prison
conditions, viewing this as a microcosm of the anti-apartheid struggle.[127] ANC
prisoners elected him to their four-man "High Organ" along with
Sisulu, Govan Mbeki andRaymond Mhlaba,
while he also involved himself in a group representing all political prisoners
on the island, Ulundi, through which he forged links with PAC and Yu Chi Chan
Club members.[128] Initiating
the "University of Robben Island," whereby prisoners lectured on
their own areas of expertise, he debated topics such as homosexuality and
politics with his comrades, getting into fierce arguments on the latter with Marxists
like Mbeki and Harry Gwala.[129] Though
attending Christian Sunday services, Mandela studied Islam.[130] He
also studied Afrikaans, hoping to build a mutual respect with the warders
and convert them to his cause.[131] Various
official visitors met with Mandela; most significant was the liberal
parliamentary representative Helen Suzman of
the Progressive Party, who championed
Mandela's cause outside prison.[132] In
September 1970 he met British Labour Party MP Dennis Healey.[133] South
African Minister of Justice Jimmy Kruger visited
in December 1974, but he and Mandela did not get on.[134] His
mother visited in 1968, dying shortly after, and his firstborn son Thembi died
in a car accident the following year; Mandela was forbidden from attending
either funeral.[135] His
wife was rarely able to visit, being regularly imprisoned for political
activity, while his daughters first visited in December 1975; Winnie got out of
prison in 1977 but was forcibly settled in Brandfort,
still unable to visit him.[136]
Mandela's cell and the prison yard at Robben Island, where he was
imprisoned
From 1967, prison conditions improved, with black prisoners given trousers
rather than shorts, games being permitted, and food quality improving.[137] In
a FIFA documentary, Mandela commented on how football gave hope to his fellow inmates;
"the game made us feel alive and triumphant despite the situation we found
ourselves in".[138] In
1969, an escape plan for Mandela was developed by Gordon Bruce, but it was
abandoned after being infiltrated by an agent of the South African Bureau of State
Security (BOSS), who hoped to see Mandela shot during the
escape.[139] In
1970, Commander Piet Badenhorst became commanding officer. Mandela, seeing an
increase in the physical and mental abuse of prisoners, complained to visiting
judges, who had Badenhorst reassigned.[140] He
was replaced by Commander Willie Willemse, who developed a co-operative
relationship with Mandela and was keen to improve prison standards.[141] By
1975, Mandela had become a Class A prisoner,[142] allowing
greater numbers of visits and letters; he corresponded with anti-apartheid
activists like Mangosuthu Buthelezi and Desmond Tutu.[143] That
year, he began his autobiography, which was smuggled to London, but remained
unpublished at the time; prison authorities discovered several pages, and his
study privileges were stopped for four years.[144] Instead
he devoted his spare time to gardening and reading until he resumed his LLB
degree studies in 1980.[145]
By the late 1960s, Mandela's fame had been eclipsed by Steve Biko and
the Black Consciousness Movement (BCM).
Seeing the ANC as ineffectual, the BCM called for militant action, but following
the Soweto uprising of 1976, many BCM activists
were imprisoned on Robben Island.[146] Mandela
tried to build a relationship with these young radicals, although he was
critical of their racialism and contempt for white anti-apartheid activists.[147] Renewed
international interest in his plight came in July 1978, when he celebrated his
60th birthday.[148] He
was awarded an honorary doctorate in Lesotho, the Jawaharlal Nehru Award for International Understanding in
India in 1979, and the Freedom of the City of Glasgow,
Scotland in 1981.[149][150][151] In
March 1980 the slogan "Free Mandela!" was developed by journalist Percy Qoboza,
sparking an international campaign that led the UN Security Council to call for his
release.[152] Despite
increasing foreign pressure, the government refused, relying on powerful
foreign Cold War allies
in US President Ronald Reagan and UK Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher; Thatcher considered Mandela a communist terrorist and
supported the suppression of the ANC.[153]
Pollsmoor Prison: 1982–1988
In April 1982 Mandela was transferred to Pollsmoor
Prison in Tokai, Cape
Town along with senior ANC leaders Walter Sisulu, Andrew
Mlangeni, Ahmed Kathrada and Raymond Mhlaba; they
believed that they were being isolated to remove their influence on younger
activists.[154] Conditions
at Pollsmoor were better than at Robben Island, although Mandela missed the
camaraderie and scenery of the island.[155] Getting
on well with Pollsmoor's commanding officer, Brigadier Munro, Mandela was
permitted to create a roof garden,[156] also
reading voraciously and corresponding widely, now permitted 52 letters a year.[157] He
was appointed patron of the multi-racial United Democratic Front (UDF),
founded to combat reforms implemented
by South African President P.W. Botha.
Botha's National Party government had permitted Coloured and Indian citizens to
vote for their own parliaments which would have control over education, health,
and housing, but black Africans were excluded from the system; like Mandela,
the UDF saw this as an attempt to divide the anti-apartheid movement on racial
lines.[158]
Bust of Mandela erected on London's Southbank by theGreater London Counciladministration of
socialist Ken Livingstone in 1985
Violence across the country escalated, with many fearing civil war. Under
pressure from an international lobby, multinational banks stopped investing in
South Africa, resulting in economic stagnation. Numerous banks and Thatcher
asked Botha to release Mandela – then at the height of his international fame –
to defuse the volatile situation.[159] Although
considering Mandela a dangerous "arch-Marxist",[160] in
February 1985 Botha offered him a release from prison on condition that he
'"unconditionally rejected violence as a political weapon". Mandela
spurned the offer, releasing a statement through his daughter Zindzi stating
"What freedom am I being offered while the organisation of the people
[ANC] remains banned? Only free men can negotiate. A prisoner cannot enter into
contracts."[161]
In 1985 Mandela underwent surgery on an enlarged prostate gland, before
being given new solitary quarters on the ground floor.[162] He
was met by "seven eminent persons", an international delegation sent
to negotiate a settlement, but Botha's government refused to co-operate, in
June calling a state of emergency and initiating a police crackdown on unrest.
The anti-apartheid resistance fought back, with the ANC committing 231 attacks
in 1986 and 235 in 1987. Utilising the army and right-wing paramilitaries to
combat the resistance, the government secretly funded Zulu nationalist
movement Inkatha to
attack ANC members, furthering the violence.[163] Mandela
requested talks with Botha but was denied, instead secretly meeting with
Minister of Justice Kobie Coetsee in 1987, having a further 11
meetings over 3 years. Coetsee organised negotiations between Mandela and a
team of four government figures starting in May 1988; the team agreed to the
release of political prisoners and the legalisation of the ANC on the condition
that they permanently renounce violence, break links with the Communist Party
and not insist on majority rule. Mandela rejected these
conditions, insisting that the ANC would only end the armed struggle when the
government renounced violence.[164]
Mandela's 70th birthday in July 1988 attracted international attention,
notably with the Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute concert
at London's Wembley Stadium.[165] Although
presented globally as a heroic figure, he faced personal problems when ANC
leaders informed him that Winnie had set herself up as head of a criminal gang,
the "Mandela United Football Club", who had been responsible for
torturing and killing opponents – including children – in Soweto. Though some
encouraged him to divorce her, he decided to remain loyal until she was found
guilty by trial.[166]
Victor Verster Prison and release: 1988–1990
Mandela on a 1988 Soviet commemorative stamp
Recovering from tuberculosis caused by dank conditions in
his cell,[167] in
December 1988 Mandela was moved to Victor Verster Prison near Paarl. Here, he was
housed in the relative comfort of a warders house with a personal cook, using
the time to complete his LLB degree.[168] Allowed
many visitors, Mandela organised secret communications with exiled ANC leader
Oliver Tambo.[169] In
1989, Botha suffered a stroke, retaining the state presidency but stepping down
as leader of the National Party, to be replaced by the conservative F. W. de Klerk.[170] In
a surprise move, Botha invited Mandela to a meeting over tea in July 1989, an
invitation Mandela considered genial.[171] Botha
was replaced as state president by de Klerk six weeks later; the new president
believed that apartheid was unsustainable and unconditionally released all ANC
prisoners except Mandela.[172] Following
the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989, de Klerk
called his cabinet together to debate legalising the ANC and freeing Mandela.
Although some were deeply opposed to his plans, de Klerk met with Mandela in
December to discuss the situation, a meeting both men considered friendly,
before releasing Mandela unconditionally and legalising all formerly banned
political parties on 2 February 1990.[173] The
first photographs of Mandela were allowed to be published in South Africa for
20 years.[174]
Leaving Victor Verster on 11 February, Mandela held Winnie's hand in front
of amassed crowds and press; the event was broadcast live across the world.[175]Driven
to Cape Town's City Hall through crowds, he
gave a speech declaring his commitment to peace and reconciliation with the
white minority, but made it clear that the ANC's armed struggle was not over,
and would continue as "a purely defensive action against the violence of
apartheid." He expressed hope that the government would agree to
negotiations, so that "there may no longer be the need for the armed
struggle", and insisted that his main focus was to bring peace to the black
majority and give them the right to vote in national and local elections.[176] Staying
at the home of Desmond Tutu, in the following days Mandela met
with friends, activists, and press, giving a speech to 100,000 people at
Johannesburg's Soccer City.[177]
End of apartheid
Main article: Negotiations to end apartheid in
South Africa
Early negotiations: 1990–1991
Shell House in Johannesburg, which became ANC headquarters in 1991
Mandela proceeded on an African tour, meeting supporters and politicians in
Zambia, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Libya and Algeria, continuing to Sweden where he was
reunited with Tambo, and then London, where he appeared at the Nelson Mandela:
An International Tribute for a Free South Africa concert in
Wembley Stadium.[178] Encouraging
foreign countries to support sanctions against the apartheid government, in
France he was welcomed by President François Mitterrand, in Vatican City by Pope John Paul
II, and in England he met Margaret
Thatcher. In the United States, he met PresidentGeorge H.W.
Bush, addressed both Houses of Congress and visited eight cities,
being particularly popular among the African-American community.[179]In
Cuba he met President Fidel Castro, whom he had long admired, with the
two becoming friends.[180] In
Asia he met President R. Venkataraman in
India, President Suharto in Indonesia and Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad in Malaysia, before visiting Australia to meet Prime
Minister Bob Hawkeand
Japan; he notably did not visit the Soviet Union,
a longtime ANC supporter.[181]
In May 1990, Mandela led a multiracial ANC delegation into preliminary
negotiations with a government delegation of 11 Afrikaner men. Mandela
impressed them with his discussions of Afrikaner history, and the negotiations
led to the Groot Schuur Minute, in which the government lifted the state of
emergency. In August Mandela – recognising the ANC's severe military
disadvantage – offered a ceasefire, the Pretoria Minute, for which he was
widely criticised by MK activists.[182] He
spent much time trying to unify and build the ANC, appearing at a Johannesburg
conference in December attended by 1600 delegates, many of whom found him more
moderate than expected.[183] At
the ANC's July 1991 national conference in Durban, Mandela admitted the party's
faults and announced his aim to build a "strong and well-oiled task force"
for securing majority rule. At the conference, he was elected ANC President,
replacing the ailing Tambo, while a 50-strong multiracial, multi-gendered
national executive was elected.[184]
Mandela was given an office in the newly purchased ANC headquarters at Shell House,
central Johannesburg, while moving with Winnie to her large Soweto home.[185] Their
marriage was increasingly strained as he learned of her affair with
Dali Mpofu, but he supported her during her trial for kidnapping and assault.
He gained funding for her defence from the International Defence and Aid Fund
for Southern Africa and from Libyan leaderMuammar Gaddafi,
but in June 1991 she was found guilty and sentenced to six years in prison,
reduced to two on appeal. On 13 April 1992, Mandela publicly announced his
separation from Winnie, while the ANC forced her to step down from the national
executive for misappropriating ANC funds; Mandela moved into the mostly white
Johannesburg suburb of Houghton.[186] Mandela's
reputation was further damaged by the increase in "black-on-black"
violence, particularly between ANC and Inkatha supporters in KwaZulu-Natal,
in which thousands died. Mandela met with Inkatha leader Buthelezi, but the ANC
prevented further negotiations on the issue. Mandela recognised that there was
a "third force" within the state
intelligence services fuelling the "slaughter of the people" and
openly blamed de Klerk – whom he increasingly distrusted – for the Sebokeng
massacre.[187] In
September 1991 a national peace conference was held in Johannesburg in which
Mandela, Buthelezi and de Klerk signed a peace accord, though the violence
continued.[188]
CODESA talks: 1991–1992
The Convention for a Democratic South
Africa (CODESA) began in December 1991 at the Johannesburg
World Trade Center, attended by 228 delegates from 19 political parties.
Although Cyril Ramaphosa led the ANC's delegation,
Mandela remained a key figure, and after de Klerk used the closing speech to
condemn the ANC's violence, he took to the stage to denounce him as "head
of an illegitimate, discredited minority regime". Dominated by the
National Party and ANC, little negotiation was achieved.[189] CODESA
2 was held in May 1992, in which de Klerk insisted that post-apartheid South
Africa must use a federal system with a rotating presidency to ensure the
protection of ethnic minorities; Mandela opposed this, demanding a unitary system governed
by majority rule.[190] Following
the Boipatong massacre of ANC activists by
government-aided Inkatha militants, Mandela called off the negotiations, before
attending a meeting of the Organisation of African Unity in
Senegal, at which he called for a special session of the UN Security Council
and proposed that a UN peacekeeping force be stationed
in South Africa to prevent "state terrorism".
The UN subsequently sent special envoy Cyrus Vance to
the country to aid negotiations.[191] Calling
for domestic mass action, in August the ANC organised the largest-ever strike
in South African history, while supporters marched on Pretoria.[192]
De Klerk and Mandela shake hands at the World Economic Forum, 1992
Following the Bisho massacre, in which 28 ANC supporters and
one soldier were shot dead by the Ciskei Defence Force during a protest
march, Mandela realised that mass action was leading to further violence and
resumed negotiations in September. He agreed to do so on the conditions that
all political prisoners be released, that Zulu traditional weapons be banned,
and that Zulu hostels would be fenced off, the latter two measures to prevent
further Inkatha attacks; under increasing pressure, de Klerk reluctantly
agreed. The negotiations agreed that a multiracial general election would be
held, resulting in a five-year coalition government of national unity and
a constitutional assembly that gave the National Party continuing influence.
The ANC also conceded to safeguarding the jobs of white civil servants; such
concessions brought fierce internal criticism.[193] The
duo agreed on an interim constitution,
guaranteeing separation of powers, creating a constitutional court, and
including a US-style bill of rights; it also divided the country into
nine provinces, each with its own premier and civil service, a concession
between de Klerk's desire for federalism and
Mandela's for unitary government.[194]
The democratic process was threatened by the Concerned South Africans Group
(COSAG), an alliance of far-right Afrikaner parties and black
ethnic-secessionist groups like Inkatha; in June 1993 the white supremacist Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) attacked the Kempton Park World
Trade Centre.[195] Following
the murder of ANC leader Chris Hani, Mandela made a publicised speech to
calm rioting, soon after appearing at a mass funeral in Soweto for Tambo, who
had died from a stroke.[196] In
July 1993, both Mandela and de Klerk visited the US, independently meeting
President Bill Clinton and each receiving the Liberty Medal.[197] Soon
after, they were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Norway.[198] Influenced
by young ANC leader Thabo Mbeki, Mandela began meeting with big
business figures, and played down his support for nationalisation, fearing that
he would scare away much-needed foreign investment. Although criticised by
socialist ANC members, he was encouraged to embrace private enterprise by
members of the Chinese and Vietnamese Communist parties at the January 1992 World Economic Forum in Switzerland.[199]Mandela
also made a cameo appearance as a schoolteacher reciting one of Malcolm X's
speeches in the final scene of the 1992 film Malcolm X.[200]
General election: 1994
Main article: South African general election, 1994
Mandela casting his vote in the 1994 elections
With the election set for 27 April 1994, the ANC began campaigning, opening
100 election offices and hiring advisor Stanley
Greenberg. Greenberg orchestrated the foundation of People's Forums
across the country, at which Mandela could appear; though a poor public
speaker, he was a popular figure with great status among black South Africans.[201] The
ANC campaigned on a Reconstruction and Development
Programme (RDP) to build a million houses in five years,
introduce universal free education and extend access to water and electricity.
The party's slogan was "a better life for all", although it was not
explained how this development would be funded.[202] With
the exception of the Weekly Mail and the New Nation,
South Africa's press opposed Mandela's election, fearing continued ethnic
strife, instead supporting the National or Democratic Party.[203] Mandela
devoted much time to fundraising for the ANC, touring North America, Europe and
Asia to meet wealthy donors, including former supporters of the apartheid
regime.[204] He
also urged a reduction in the voting age from 18 to 14; rejected by the ANC,
this policy became the subject of ridicule.[205]
Concerned that COSAG would undermine the election, particularly in the wake
of the Battle of Bop and Shell House Massacre – incidents of
violence involving the AWB and Inkatha, respectively – Mandela met with
Afrikaner politicians and generals, including P.W. Botha, Pik Botha and Constand
Viljoen, persuading many to work within the democratic system, and
with de Klerk convinced Inkatha's Buthelezi to enter the elections rather than
launch a war of secession.[206]As
leaders of the two major parties, de Klerk and Mandela appeared on a televised
debate; although de Klerk was widely considered the better speaker at the
event, Mandela's offer to shake his hand surprised him, leading some
commentators to consider it a victory for Mandela.[207] The
election went ahead with little violence, although an AWB cell killed 20 with
car bombs. Mandela voted at the Ohlange High School in Durban, and though
he was elected President, he publicly accepted that the election had been
marred by instances of fraud and sabotage.[208] Having
taken 62% of the national vote, the ANC was just short of the two-thirds
majority needed to unilaterally change the constitution. The ANC was also
victorious in 7 provinces, with Inkatha and the National Party each taking
another.[209]
Presidency of South Africa: 1994–1999
Main article: Presidency of Nelson Mandela
Mandela's inauguration took place in Pretoria on 10 May 1994, televised to
a billion viewers globally. The event was attended by 4000 guests, including
world leaders from disparate backgrounds.[210] South
Africa's first black President, Mandela became head of a Government of National Unity dominated
by the ANC – which alone had no experience of governance – but containing
representatives from the National Party and Inkatha. In keeping with earlier
agreements, de Klerk became first Deputy President, while Thabo Mbeki was
selected as second.[211]Although
Mbeki had not been his first choice for the job, Mandela would grow to rely
heavily on him throughout his presidency, allowing him to organise policy
details.[212] Moving
into the presidential office at Tuynhuys in
Cape Town, Mandela allowed de Klerk to retain the presidential residence in the Groote Schuur estate,
instead settling into the nearby Westbrooke manor, which he renamed "Genadendal",
meaning "Valley of Mercy" in Afrikaans.[213] Retaining
his Houghton home, he also had a house built in his home village of Qunu, which
he visited regularly, walking around the area, meeting with locals, and judging
tribal disputes.[214]
Mandela moved into the Presidential Office of Tuynhuys, Cape Town
Aged 76, he faced various ailments, and although exhibiting continued
energy, he felt isolated and lonely.[215] He
often entertained celebrities, such asMichael Jackson, Whoopi Goldberg,
and the Spice Girls, and befriended a number of ultra-rich
businessman, like Harry Oppenheimer of Anglo-American, as well as Queen Elizabeth II on
her March 1995 state visit to South Africa, resulting in
strong criticism from ANC anti-capitalists.[216]Despite
his opulent surroundings, Mandela lived simply, donating a third of his 552,000
rand annual income to the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund, which he
had founded in 1995.[217] Although
speaking out in favour of freedom of the press and befriending many
journalists, Mandela was critical of much of the country's media, noting that
it was overwhelmingly owned and run by middle-class whites and believing that
it focused too much on scaremongering around crime.[218] Changing
clothes several times a day, after assuming the presidency, one of Mandela's
trademarks was his use ofBatik shirts, known as "Madiba shirts",
even on formal occasions.[219]
In December 1994, Mandela's autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, was finally published.[220] In
late 1994 he attended the 49th conference of the ANC in Bloemfontein,
at which a more militant National Executive was elected, among them Winnie
Mandela; although she expressed an interest in reconciling, Nelson initiated
divorce proceedings in August 1995.[221] By
1995 he had entered into a relationship with Graça Machel,
a Mozambican political activist 27 years his junior who was the widow of former
president Samora Machel. They had first met in July 1990,
when she was still in mourning, but their friendship grew into a partnership,
with Machel accompanying him on many of his foreign visits. She turned down
Mandela's first marriage proposal, wanting to retain some independence and
dividing her time between Mozambique and Johannesburg.[222]
National reconciliation
Presiding over the transition from apartheid minority rule to a
multicultural democracy, Mandela saw national reconciliation as the primary
task of his presidency.[223] Having
seen other post-colonial African economies damaged by the departure of white
elites, Mandela worked to reassure South Africa's white population that they
were protected and represented in "the Rainbow
Nation".[224] Mandela
attempted to create the broadest possible coalition in his cabinet, with de
Klerk as first Deputy President while other National Party officials became
ministers for Agriculture, Energy, Environment, and Minerals and Energy, and
Buthelezi was named Minister for Home Affairs.[225] The
other cabinet positions were taken by ANC members, many of whom – like Joe Modise, Alfred Nzo,
Joe Slovo, Mac Maharaj and Dullah Omar –
had long been comrades, although others, such as Tito Mboweni and Jeff Radebe,
were much younger.[226] Mandela's
relationship with de Klerk was strained; Mandela thought that de Klerk was
intentionally provocative, while de Klerk felt that he was being intentionally
humiliated by the president. In January 1995, Mandela heavily chastised him for
awarding amnesty to 3,500 police just before the election, and later criticised
him for defending former Minister of Defence Magnus Malan when
the latter was charged with murder.[227]
Flag of South Africa, adopted April 1994
Mandela personally met with senior figures of the apartheid regime,
including Hendrik Verwoerd's widow Betsie Schoombie and
the lawyer Percy Yutar; emphasising personal forgiveness and reconciliation, he
announced that "courageous people do not fear forgiving, for the sake of
peace."[228] He
encouraged black South Africans to get behind the previously hated national
rugby team, the Springboks, as South
Africa hosted the 1995 Rugby World Cup. After the Springboks won
an epic final over New Zealand, Mandela presented the trophy to captain Francois
Pienaar, an Afrikaner, wearing a Springbok shirt with Pienaar's own
number 6 on the back. This was widely seen as a major step in the
reconciliation of white and black South Africans; as de Klerk later put it,
"Mandela won the hearts of millions of white rugby fans."[229] Mandela's
efforts at reconciliation assuaged the fears of whites, but also drew criticism
from more militant blacks. His estranged wife, Winnie, accused the ANC of being
more interested in appeasing whites than in helping blacks.[230]
More controversially, Mandela oversaw the formation of a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to investigate crimes committed under
apartheid by both the government and the ANC, appointing Desmond Tutu as its
chair. To prevent the creation of martyrs, the Commission granted individual
amnesties in exchange for testimony of crimes committed during the apartheid
era. Dedicated in February 1996, it held two years of hearings detailing rapes,
torture, bombings, and assassinations, before issuing its final report in
October 1998. Both de Klerk and Mbeki appealed to have parts of the report
suppressed, though only de Klerk's appeal was successful.[231] Mandela
praised the Commission's work, stating that it "had helped us move away
from the past to concentrate on the present and the future".[232]
Domestic programmes
Mandela on a visit to Brazil in 1998
Mandela's administration inherited a country with a huge disparity in
wealth and services between white and black communities. Of a population of 40
million, around 23 million lacked electricity or adequate sanitation, 12
million lacked clean water supplies, with 2 million children not in school and
a third of the population illiterate. There was 33% unemployment, and just
under half of the population lived below the poverty line.[233] Government
financial reserves were nearly depleted, with a fifth of the national budget
being spent on debt repayment, meaning that the extent of the promised
Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) was scaled back, with none of
the proposed nationalisation or job creation.[234] Instead,
the government adopted liberal economic policies designed to promote foreign
investment, adhering to the "Washington consensus" advocated by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.[235]
Under Mandela's presidency, welfare spending increased by 13% in 1996/97,
13% in 1997/98, and 7% in 1998/99.[236] The
government introduced parity in grants for communities, including disability
grants, child maintenance grants, and old-age pensions, which had previously
been set at different levels for South Africa's different racial groups.[236] In
1994, free healthcare was introduced for children under six and pregnant women,
a provision extended to all those using primary level public sector health care
services in 1996.[237] By
the 1999 election, the ANC could boast that due to their policies, 3 million
people were connected to telephone lines, 1.5 million children were brought
into the education system, 500 clinics were upgraded or constructed, 2 million
people were connected to the electricity grid, water access was extended to 3
million people, and 750,000 houses were constructed, housing nearly 3 million
people.[238]
The Land Restitution Act of 1994 enabled people who had lost their property
as a result of the Natives Land Act, 1913 to claim back their
land, leading to the settlement of tens of thousands of land claims.[239] The
Land Reform Act 3 of 1996 safeguarded the rights of labour tenants who live and
grow crops or graze livestock on farms. This legislation ensured that such
tenants could not be evicted without a court order or if they were over the age
of sixty-five.[240] The
Skills Development Act of 1998 provided for the establishment of mechanisms to
finance and promote skills development at the workplace.[241] The
Labour Relations Act of 1995 promoted workplace democracy, orderly collective
bargaining, and the effective resolution of labour disputes.[242] The
Basic Conditions of Employment Act of 1997 improved enforcement mechanisms
while extending a "floor" of rights to all workers,[242] while
the Employment Equity Act of 1998 was passed to put an end to unfair
discrimination and ensure the implementation of affirmative action in the
workplace.[242]
Many domestic problems however remained. Critics like Edwin Cameron accused
Mandela's government of doing little to stem the HIV/AIDS pandemic in the
country; by 1999, 10% of South Africa's population were HIV positive. Mandela
later admitted that he had personally neglected the issue, leaving it for Mbeki
to deal with.[243] Mandela
also received criticism for failing to sufficiently combat crime, South Africa
having one of the world's highest crime rates; this was a key reason cited by
the 750,000 whites who emigrated in the late 1990s.[244] Mandela's
administration was mired in corruption scandals, with Mandela being perceived
as "soft" on corruption and greed.[245]
Foreign affairs
Mandela with US President Bill Clinton.
Though publicly criticising him on several occasions, Mandela liked Clinton,
and personally supported him during his impeachment proceedings[246]
Following the South African example, Mandela encouraged other nations to
resolve conflicts through diplomacy and reconciliation.[247] He
echoed Mbeki's calls for an "African Renaissance", and was greatly
concerned with issues on the continent; he took a soft diplomatic approach
to removingSani Abacha's military junta in Nigeria but
later became a leading figure in calling for sanctions when Abacha's regime
increased human rights violations.[248] In
1996 he was appointed Chairman of the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) and initiated unsuccessful negotiations to end
the First Congo War in Zaire.[249] In South Africa's first post-apartheid
military operation, Mandela ordered troops into Lesotho in September
1998 to protect the government of Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili after a disputed
election prompted opposition uprisings.[250]
In September 1998, Mandela was appointed Secretary-General of the Non-Aligned Movement, who held their annual
conference in Durban. He used the event to criticise the "narrow,
chauvinistic interests" of the Israeli government in stalling negotiations
to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
urged India and Pakistan to negotiate to end the Kashmir conflict,
for which he was criticised by both Israel and India.[251] Inspired
by the region's economic boom, Mandela sought greater economic relations with
East Asia, in particular with Malaysia, although this was scuppered by the 1997 Asian financial crisis.[252] He
attracted controversy for his close relationship with Indonesian President
Suharto, whose regime was responsible for mass human rights abuses, although
privately urged him to withdraw from the occupation of East Timor.[253]
Mandela faced similar criticism from the west for his personal friendships
with Fidel Castro and Muammar Gaddafi. Castro visited in 1998, to widespread
popular acclaim, while Mandela met Gaddafi in Libya to award him the Order of Good Hope.[254] When
western governments and media criticised these visits, Mandela lambasted the
criticisms as having racist undertones.[255] Mandela
hoped to resolve the long-running dispute between Libya and the US and Britain
over bringing to trial the two Libyans, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi and Lamin Khalifah Fhimah, who were indicted in
November 1991 and accused of sabotaging Pan Am Flight
103. Mandela proposed that they be tried in a third country, which
was agreed to by all parties; governed by Scots law,
the trial was held at Camp Zeist in the Netherlands in April
1999, and found one of the two men guilty.[256]
Withdrawing from politics
The new Constitution of South Africa was
agreed upon by parliament in May 1996, enshrining a series of institutions to
check political and administrative authority within a constitutional democracy.[257] De
Klerk however opposed the implementation of this constitution, withdrawing from
the coalition government in protest.[258] The
ANC took over the cabinet positions formerly held by the National Party, with
Mbeki becoming sole Deputy President.[259] When
both Mandela and Mbeki were out of the country in one occasion, Buthelezi was
appointed "Acting President", marking an improvement in his
relationship with Mandela.[260]
Mandela stepped down as ANC President at the December 1997 conference, and
although hoping that Ramaphosa would replace him, the ANC elected Mbeki to the
position; Mandela admitted that by then, Mbeki had become "de facto President
of the country". Replacing Mbeki as Deputy President, Mandela and the
Executive supported the candidacy of Jacob Zuma,
a Zulu who had been imprisoned on Robben Island, but he was challenged by
Winnie, whose populist rhetoric had gained her a strong following within the
party; Zuma defeated her in a landslide victory vote at the election.[261]
Mandela's relationship with Machel had intensified; in February 1998 he
publicly stated that "I'm in love with a remarkable lady", and under
pressure from his friend Desmond Tutu, who urged him to set an example for
young people, he set a wedding for his 80th birthday, in July.[262] The
following day he held a grand party with many foreign dignitaries.[263] Mandela
had never planned on standing for a second term in office, and gave his farewell
speech on 29 March 1999, after which he retired.[264]
Retirement
Continued activism and philanthropy: 1999–2004
Mandela visiting the London School of Economics in 2000
Retiring in June 1999, Mandela sought a quiet family life, to be divided
between Johannesburg and Qunu. He set about authoring a sequel to his first
autobiography, to be titled The Presidential Years, but it was
abandoned before publication.[265] Finding
such seclusion difficult, he reverted to a busy public life with a daily programme
of tasks, meeting with world leaders and celebrities, and when in Johannesburg
worked with the Nelson Mandela Foundation, founded in 1999 to focus on
combating HIV/AIDS, rural development and school construction.[266] Although
he had been heavily criticised for failing to do enough to fight the pandemic
during his presidency, he devoted much of his time to the issue following his
retirement, describing it as "a war" that had killed more than
"all previous wars", and urged Mbeki's government to ensure that HIV+
South Africans had access to retrovirals.[267] In
2000, the Nelson Mandela Invitational charity
golf tournament was founded, hosted by Gary Player.[268] Mandela
was successfully treated for prostate cancer in
July 2001.[269]
In 2002, Mandela inaugurated the Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture, and in 2003
the Mandela Rhodes Foundation was created
at Rhodes House,University of Oxford, to provide postgraduate
scholarships to African students. These projects were followed by the Nelson
Mandela Centre of Memory and the 46664 campaign against
HIV/AIDS.[270] He
gave the closing address at the XIII International AIDS Conference in
Durban in 2000,[271] and
in 2004, spoke at the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok,
Thailand.[272]
Publicly, Mandela became more vocal in criticising Western powers. He
strongly opposed the 1999 NATO
intervention in Kosovo and called it an attempt by the world's
powerful nations to police the entire world.[273] In
2003 he spoke out against the plans for the US and UK to launch the War in Iraq,
describing it as "a tragedy" and lambasting US President George W. Bush and
UK Prime Minister Tony Blair for undermining the UN. He
attacked the US more generally, asserting that it had committed more
"unspeakable atrocities" across the world than any other nation,
citing theatomic bombing of Japan;
this attracted international controversy, although he would subsequently
reconcile his relationship with Blair.[274] Retaining
an interest in Libyan-UK relations, he visited Megrahi in Barlinnie
prison and spoke out against the conditions of his treatment,
referring to them as "psychological persecution".[275]
"Retiring from retirement", illness: 2004–2013
Nelson Mandela and President George W. Bush in the Oval Office, May 2005
In June 2004, aged 85 and amid failing health, Mandela announced that he
was "retiring from retirement" and retreating from public life,
remarking "Don't call me, I will call you."[276] Although
continuing to meet with close friends and family, the Foundation discouraged
invitations for him to appear at public events and denied most interview
requests.[277]
He retained some involvement in international affairs. In 2005, he founded
the Nelson Mandela Legacy Trust,[278] travelling
to the U.S., to speak before the Brookings Institute and the NAACP on the need
for economic assistance to Africa.[278][279] He
spoke with U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton and
President George W. Bush and first met then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama.[279] Mandela
also encouraged Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe to
resign over growing human rights abuses in the country. When this proved
ineffective, he spoke out publicly against Mugabe in 2007, asking him to step
down "with residual respect and a modicum of dignity."[280] That
year, Mandela, Machel, and Desmond Tutu convened a group of world leaders in
Johannesburg to contribute their wisdom and independent leadership to some of
the world's toughest problems. Mandela announced the formation of this new
group, The Elders, in a speech delivered on his
89th birthday.[281]
Mandela's 90th birthday was marked across the country on 18 July 2008, with
the main celebrations held at Qunu,[282] and
a concert in his honour inHyde Park,
London.[283] In
a speech marking the event, Mandela called for the rich to help the poor across
the world.[282] Throughout
Mbeki's presidency, Mandela continued to support the ANC, although usually
overshadowed Mbeki at any public events that the two attended. Mandela was more
at ease with Mbeki's successor Jacob Zuma,
although the Nelson Mandela Foundation were upset when his grandson, Mandla Mandela,
flew him out to the Eastern Cape to attend a pro-Zuma rally in the midst of a
storm in 2009.[284]
In 2004, Mandela had successfully campaigned for South Africa to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup, declaring that there would
be "few better gifts for us in the year" marking a decade since the
fall of apartheid. Mandela emotionally raised the FIFA World Cup Trophy after South Africa
was awarded host status.[285] Despite
maintaining a low profile during the event due to ill-health, Mandela made what
would be his final public appearance during the World Cup closing ceremony,
where he received a "rapturous reception".[286][287] Between
2005 and 2013, Mandela, and later his family, were embroiled in a series of
legal disputes regarding money held in family trusts for the benefit of his
descendants.[288] In
mid-2013, as Mandela was hospitalised for a lung infection in Pretoria, his
descendants were involved in intra-family legal dispute relating to the burial
place of Mandela's deceased children, and ultimately Mandela himself.[289][290][291]
Senator Barack Obama meets for the first time with
Nelson Mandela, 17 May 2005
In February 2011, he was briefly hospitalised with a respiratory infection, attracting international
attention,[292] before
being re-hospitalised for a lung infection andgallstone removal
in December 2012.[293] After
a successful medical procedure in early March 2013,[294] his
lung infection recurred, and he was briefly hospitalised in Pretoria.[295] On
8 June 2013, his lung infection worsened, and he was rehospitalised in Pretoria
in a serious condition.[296] After
four days, it was reported that he had stabilised and remained in a
"serious, but stable condition".[297] En
route to the hospital, his ambulance broke down and was stranded on the
roadside for 40 minutes. The government was criticised for the incident, but
Zuma countered that throughout, Mandela was given "expert medical
care."[298]
On 22 June 2013, CBS News stated that he had not opened his eyes in days
and was unresponsive, and the family was discussing how much medical
intervention should be given.[299] Former
bodyguard Shaun van Heerden, described by CBS News as "Mandela's constant
companion for the last 12 years", had publicly asked the family to
"set him free" a week prior.[300] On
23 June 2013, Zuma announced that Mandela's condition had become "critical".[301][302][303]Zuma,
accompanied by the Deputy President of the ANC, Cyril Ramaphosa,
met Mandela's wife Graça Machel at the hospital in Pretoria and discussed his
condition.[304] On
25 June Cape Town Archbishop Thabo Makgoba visited
Mandela at the hospital and prayed with Graça Machel Mandela "at this hard
time of watching and waiting".[305] The
next day, Zuma visited Mandela in the hospital and canceled a visit scheduled
for the next day to Mozambique.[306] A
relative of Mandela told The Daily Telegraph newspaper he was on life support.[307]
On 4 July, it was reported that David Smith, a lawyer acting on behalf of
Mandela family members, claimed in court on 26 June that Mandela was in a
permanentvegetative state and life support should be
shut off.[308][309][310] The
South African Presidency stated that the doctors treating Mandela denied that
he was in a vegetative state.[311][312] On
10 July, Zuma's office announced that Mandela remained in critical but stable
condition, and was responding to treatment.[313]
On 1 September 2013, Mandela was discharged from hospital[314] although
his condition remained unstable.[315]
Death and funeral
See also: Death of Nelson Mandela
Mandela died of a lung infection on 5 December 2013 at around 20:50 UTC at
his home in Houghton, Johannesburg surrounded
by his family. He was 95 years of age.[316] His
death was announced by President Jacob Zuma.[316][317] On
6 December Zuma announced a national mourning period of ten days, with the main
event being an official memorial service to be held at theFNB Stadium in
Johannesburg on 10 December 2013. Mandela's body will lie in state from
11 to 13 December at the Union Buildings in
Pretoria and a state funeral will be held on 15 December
2013 in Qunu.[318][319]
Political ideology
A "Free Mandela" protest in Berlin, 1986
Mandela was an African nationalist, an ideological position he
held since joining the ANC,[320] also
being "a democrat, and a socialist".[321] Although
he presented himself in an autocratic manner in several speeches, Mandela was a
devout believer in democracy and would abide by majority decisions even when
deeply disagreeing with them.[322] He
held a conviction that "inclusivity, accountability and freedom of
speech" were the fundamentals of democracy,[323] and
was driven by a belief in natural and human rights.[324] This
belief drove him to not only pursue racial equality but also to promote gay
rights as part of the post-apartheid reforms.[325]
A democratic socialist, Mandela was "openly
opposed to capitalism, private land-ownership and the power of big money".[326] Influenced
by Marxism,
during the revolution Mandela advocated scientific socialism,[327] although
he denied being a communist during the Treason Trial.[328] Biographer
David James Smith thought this untrue, stating that Mandela "embraced
communism and communists" in the late 1950s and early 1960s, though was a
"fellow traveller" rather than a party
member.[329] In
the 1955 Freedom Charter, which Mandela had helped create, it called for the
nationalisation of banks, gold mines, and land, believing it necessary to
ensure equal distribution of wealth.[330] Despite
these beliefs, Mandela nationalised nothing during his presidency, fearing that
this would scare away foreign investors. This decision was in part influenced
by the fall of the socialist states in the Soviet Union and
Eastern Bloc during the early 1990s.[331]
Personal life
Mandela was a private person who often concealed his emotions and confided
in very few people.[332] Privately,
he lived an austere life, refusing to drink alcohol or smoke, and even as
President made his own bed,[333] although
was also renowned for his mischevious sense of humour.[334] He
was known for being both stubborn and loyal,[335] and
at times exhibited a quick temper.[333] He
was typically friendly and welcoming, and appeared relaxed in conversation with
everyone, including his opponents.[336] Constantly
polite and courteous, he was attentive to everyone, irrespective of their age
or status, and would often talk to children or servants.[337] In
later life he always looked for the best in people, even defending political
opponents to his allies, who sometimes thought him too trusting of others.[338] He
was highly image conscious, and throughout his life always sought out fine
quality clothes, with many commentators believing that he carried himself in a
regal manner.[339] His
official biographer Anthony Sampson commented that he was a "master of
imagery and performance", excelling at presenting himself well in press
photographs and producing soundbites.[340] In
describing his life, Mandela stated that "I was not a messiah, but an
ordinary man who had become a leader because of extraordinary
circumstances."[341]
Mandela Family Museum, Soweto
Mandela was married three times, fathered six children, had 17 grandchildren,[342] and
a large number of great-grandchildren.[343] He
could be stern and demanding of his children, although he was more affectionate
with his grandchildren.[344] His
first marriage was to Evelyn Ntoko Mase in October 1944,.[56] although
they divorced after 13 years in 1957 under the multiple strains of his adultery
and constant absences, devotion to revolutionary agitation, and the fact that
she was a member of the Jehovah's Witnesses, a religion requiring
political neutrality.[88] The
couple had two sons whom Mr. Mandela survived, Madiba "Thembi"
Thembekile (1946–1969) and Makgatho
Mandela (1950–2005); his first son died in an auto accident at
age 25, and his second son died of AIDS at age 46. The
couple had two daughters, both named Makaziwe
Mandela (born 1947 and 1953); the first died at the age of nine
months, the second, known as Maki, survived Mr. Mandela. Makgatho's son, Mandla Mandela,
became chief of the Mvezo tribal council in 2007.[345]
Mandela's second wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, also came
from the Transkei area, although they, too, met in Johannesburg, where she was
the city's first black social worker.[346] They
had two daughters, Zenani (Zeni), born 4 February 1958, and
Zindziswa (Zindzi) Mandela-Hlongwane, born 1960.[346] Zindzi
was only 18 months old when her father was sent to Robben island. Later, Winnie
would be deeply torn by family discord which mirrored the country's political
strife; separation (April 1992) and divorce (March 1996), fueled by political
estrangement.[347] Mandela's
third wife wasGraça Machel (née Simbine),
whom he married on his 80th birthday in 1998.[348]
Influence and legacy
By the time of his death, Mandela had come to be widely considered
"the father of the nation" within South Africa,[349] and
"the founding father of democracy",[350] being
seen as "the national liberator, the saviour, its Washington and Lincoln rolled
into one".[351] Mandela's
biographer Anthony Sampson commented that even during his life, a myth had
developed around him that turned him into "a secular saint" and which
was "so powerful that it blurs the realities."[352]Within
a decade after the end of his Presidency, Mandela's era was being widely
thought of as "a golden age of hope and harmony".[341] Across
the world, Mandela earned international acclaim for his activism in overcoming
apartheid and fostering racial reconciliation,[333] coming
to be viewed as "a moral authority" with a great "concern for
truth".[353]
Throughout his life, Mandela had also faced criticism. UK Prime Minister
Thatcher attracted international attention for describing the ANC as "a
typical terrorist organisation" in 1987,[354] although
she would later call on Botha to release Mandela.[355] After
his death, a number of right-wing politicians across the world continued to
label Mandela a terrorist and a communist.[356] Mandela
has also been criticized for his friendship with dictators such as Fidel Castro, Muammar Gaddafi, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Suharto as
well as his refusal to criticize their various human rights violations.[357][358]
Orders, decorations, and monuments
Nelson Mandela Bridge in Johannesburg
Main article: List of awards
and honours bestowed upon Nelson Mandela
In 2004, Johannesburg granted Mandela the freedom of the city,[359] and
the Sandton Square shopping centre was renamed Nelson Mandela Square, after a Mandela statue
was installed there.[360] In
2008, another Mandela statue was unveiled at Groot Drakenstein Correctional Centre,
formerly Victor Verster Prison, near Cape Town, standing on the spot where
Mandela was released from the prison.[361]
He has also received international acclaim. In 1993, he received the joint
Nobel Peace Prize with de Klerk.[362] In
November 2009, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed
Mandela's birthday, 18 July, as "Mandela Day",
marking his contribution to the anti-apartheid struggle. It called on
individuals to donate 67 minutes to doing something for others, commemorating
the 67 years that Mandela had been a part of the movement.[363]
Awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom,[364] and
the Order of Canada,[365] he
was the first living person to be made an honorary Canadian citizen.[366] The
last recipient of the Soviet Union's Lenin Peace
Prize from the Soviet Union,[367] and
first recipient of the Al-Gaddafi International
Prize for Human Rights,[368] in
1990 he received the Bharat Ratna Award from the government of
India,[369] and
in 1992 received Pakistan's Nishan-e-Pakistan.[370] In
1992 he was awarded the Atatürk Peace Award by Turkey. He refused the award,
citing human rights violations committed by Turkey at the time,[371] but
later accepted the award in 1999.[367] Elizabeth
II awarded him the Bailiff Grand Cross of the Order of St. John and the Order of Merit.[372]
Nelson Mandela graffiti byThierry Ehrmann in
the Abode of Chaos museum, France.
Tributes by musicians
Many artists have dedicated songs to Mandela. One of the most popular was
from The Special AKA who recorded the song
"Free Nelson Mandela" in 1983, which Elvis Costello also
recorded and had a hit with. Stevie Wonder dedicated
his 1985 Oscar for the song
"I Just Called to Say I Love You" to
Mandela, resulting in his music being banned by the South African Broadcasting
Corporation.[373] In
1985, Youssou N'Dour's album Nelson Mandela was
the Senegalese artist's first US release. Other artists who released songs or
videos honouring Mandela include Johnny Clegg,[374] Hugh Masekela,[375] Brenda Fassie,[376]Beyond,[377] Nickelback,[378] Raffi,[379] and Ampie du Preez and AB de Villiers.[380] South
African songstress Zahara, who happens to be an ambassador
of the Nelson Mandela Children's Hospital, released Nelson Mandela, an extended play
that pays tribute to Mandela whilst celebrating his lifetime accomplishments.
The EP's lead single titled "Nelson Mandela" was released at a time
when Mandela was critically ill but stable at the Medi-Clinic Heart Hospital in
Pretoria.[381][382]
Cinema and television
Mandela has been depicted in cinema and television on multiple occasions.
He was portrayed by Danny
Glover in the 1987 HBO telefilm Mandela.[383] The
1997 film Mandela
and de Klerk starred Sidney Poitier as
Mandela,[384] while Dennis Haysbert played
him in Goodbye
Bafana (2007).[385] In the
2009 BBC telefilmMrs
Mandela, Mandela was portrayed by David Harewood,[386] and Morgan Freeman portrayed
him in Invictus (2009).[387] Terrence Howard portrayed
him in the 2011 film Winnie
Mandela.[388] He is
portrayed by Idris
Elba in the 2013 film, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.[389]
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