While there is no question that Franklin
Roosevelt, Winston Churchill,
Alfred Einstein, Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King were among the great men of the 20th century, greatness
can be a relative thing and often is in the eyes of the beholder. By
those lights, my nominee for one of the greatest men of the modern era
is Nelson Mandela.
Mandela,
who left this mortal coil on Thursday at age 95, had been in
failing health for some time and was repeatedly hospitalized with a
recurring lung ailment that stemmed, in all likelihood, from tuberculosis contracted during his 27-year imprisonment, much of it spent on Robben Island, the notorious apartheid-era prison. He had been largely absent from public life since 2004, a decade after he was elected South Africa's first black president and led the deeply divided nation into an era of truth and reconciliation that sought
to give citizens of all races equal voice, and had not been seen in public since the World Cup soccer final in Johannesburg in July 2010.
As a friend said, "it was time to let him go," yet he had stubbornly hung on.
Roosevelt and
Churchill, of course, oversaw the global effort to overthrow fascism, although
the peace they fashioned was deeply flawed. Einstein's imprecations
regarding the nuclear menace were borne out, while Gandhi led India to
independence, employing the non-violent civil disobedience that King and later Mandela embraced.
Yet
it is Mandela's story that resonates most deeply for me, in part
because he was the last survivor among those leading lights, and because
I directed the coverage of his release from prison, the end of
apartheid and the wrenching early years of his presidency for a big-city
newspaper that recognized the enormity of these historic events and dedicated substantial resources to bringing them to its readers. A
consequence of my hands-on involvement was that I understood early on
that it would be South Africa's black majority, deeply fractured because
of tribal and political differences, that would be the greatest
impediment to realizing Mandela's vision. Time and events have proven
me right.
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was a Xhosa born to the Thembu royal family. He was given "Madiba" as a clan name, circumcised as a 16-year-old in a Bantu rite of passage marking his manhood, but refused a
traditional tribal marriage. He
attended a Methodist boarding school and then elite Fort Hare, a black
college that was the incubator for no fewer than four other African
presidents, and eventually made his way to
Johannesburg where he was taken under the wing of Walter Sisulu, father
figure of the African National Congress.
Not
unlike Ho Chi Minh and Vietnamese liberation, Mandela embraced the
teachings of Karl Marx and aspects of white Communism, but believed the
struggle in his homeland was, first and foremost, by and for black Africans.
While imprisoned on Robben Island, off the coast of Cape Town, he grew vegetables and cultivated his image with equal care.
It is not widely known that he also quietly reached out to the
apartheid regime in anticipation of his eventual release, and met
secretly with Niel Barnard, the head of its intelligence
service. Two other men were delegated by the ANC in exile to talk with
Barnard -- Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma, Mandela's successors as
president. Unlike the great man himself, they have made themselves the centers of personality and have been hostile to the notion
that diversity of opinion and tolerance of dissent must be at the heart
of the young South African democracy.
Biographer Ricard Stengel has written that "Prison taught Mandela how to deal with
limits and how to govern his emotions; at the same time it taught him
what was limitless, which was, broadly, the potential of humanity to do
the right thing. Be constructive, Mandela advises, be pragmatic, be
generous; look for the good in others. Mandela cultivated the mix of
bluntness and courtesy Afrikaners (the ruling white minority group) respected. He managed to disarm the
apartheid president, P. W. Botha, a harsh man, 'with a robust handshake
and a wide smile.' "
It
is therefore not surprising that Mandela brilliantly handled the
transition between his release from prison in 1990 and majority rule in 1994, while averting racial bloodshed.
Although in the end it was Mandela's extraordinary magnanimity that carried the day, less
remarked on is that despite South Africa’s loathsome anti-black
heritage,
there were solid institutions to underpin the transition to democracy,
including a parliament and electoral system,
independent courts and a free press.
In 1993, Mandela shared the Nobel Peace Prize with F.W. de Klerk, the last apartheid era president, an honor that rankles to this day, but then the Peace Prize has been irrelevant for me since 1993 when Henry Kissinger, a war criminal, shared the prize with Le Duc Tho, the Vietnamese revolutionary and diplomat, who had the class to decline it.
Mandela's legacy is not complete without acknowledging that Africa is becoming more democratic in his wake.
When the Berlin Wall fell
in late 1989, a few months before Mandela's release from prison, only
three of sub-Saharan Africa's 48 countries were democratic. Now,
21 are seen as as functioning democracies, with
another six regarded as semi-democratic.
* * * * *
For much of Mandela's life, personal happiness proved to be elusive.
He left his first wife, Evelyn Ntoko Mase, after she became a Jehovah’s Witness and accused
him of being an adulterer who abandoned his children and beat
her, a charge he denied. His second marriage to Winnie Madikizela was fraught because of her proclivity for corrupt and scandalous conduct. One of their sons was estranged from him and
killed in a car crash in 1969. Another was an alcoholic who died of
AIDS in 2005.
He finally wed Graça
Machel, the widow of the Mozambican president and former ANC ally Samora Machel, who survives him, as do three
daughters from his first two marriages, 17 grandchildren and 14
great-grandchildren. An ugly battle over control of his legacy, image and estate broke out as his health deteriorated, with two of his daughters suing to get access to a trust fund that he set
up for his descendants.
President Obama decided against a personal visit during his 2013 Africa tour, instead delivering his
respects in a private meeting with Mandela’s family. "I . . . reaffirmed the profound impact that his legacy has had in
building a free South Africa, and in inspiring people around the world —
including me," he said afterwards. "That’s a legacy that we must all honor in our own lives."
South African politicians were not so solicitous. They invaded Mandela's privacy and exploited his frailty in order
to be seen in his hallowed company, while squabbles have flared up over the TV rights to his funeral.
"Everyone wants a piece of the Madiba magic,” said William Gumede, who
has written extensively about a man who became a global symbol of forgiveness and the struggle for justice and equality. "This is just a preview of what will come when he goes."
PHOTOGRAPH BY SUSAN WINTERS COOK
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