By JOHN DRAMANI MAHAMA Published: December 5, 2013
ACCRA, Ghana — FOR years, it seemed as though only one photograph of Nelson Mandela existed. It showed him with bushy hair, plump cheeks, and a look of serious determination. But
it was a black-and-white shot, so grainy it looked ancient — a visual
documentation of an era and an individual whose time had long passed.
In the early 1960s, fed up with the systematic oppression and inhumane
treatment of indigenous Africans, Mandela successfully proposed a plan
of violent tactics and guerrilla warfare, essentially forming the
military wing of the African National Congress. Within a few years, this
martial division, aptly named Umkhonto we Sizwe or Spear of the Nation,
was discovered and its leadership detained. In 1964 Mandela was found
guilty of sabotage, and ordered to serve a life sentence.
During his trial, in lieu of testimony, he delivered a speech from the
dock. “I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in
which all persons live together in harmony and with equal
opportunities,” he said. “It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to
achieve. But if need be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to
die.”
I was 5 years old when Nelson Mandela became prisoner number 46664, and
was banished to spend the remainder of his years on Robben Island, five
square miles of land floating just north of Cape Town. Robben Island had
been the site of a colony for lepers, a lunatic asylum and a series of
prisons. It was a place of exile, punishment and isolation, a place
where people were sent and then forgotten.
But the haunting image in that photograph did not let us forget. In the 1970s, I was a member of the African Youth Command,
an activist group that protested against social and political
injustices. We idolized Mandela. We hung posters of that photograph in
our dormitory rooms; we printed it on pamphlets. We refused to let
Mandela fade into irrelevance; we marched, held demonstrations, staged
concerts and boycotts, signed petitions and issued press statements. We
did everything we could to decry the evils of apartheid and keep his
name on people’s tongues. We even burned effigies of John Vorster, Jimmy
Kruger and other proponents of that government-sanctioned white
supremacy.
Freedom on the African continent was a reality for which we were willing
to fight. Nevertheless, I think we’d resigned ourselves to the
likelihood that Mandela would remain a prisoner until his death, and
South Africans would not experience equality until well after our
lifetimes. Then on Feb. 11, 1990, the miraculous happened; Mandela was
released.
The world was spellbound. We wondered what we would do if we were in his
shoes. We all waited for an indescribable rage, a call for retribution
that any reasonable mind would have understood. Twenty-seven years of
his life, gone. Day after day of hard labor in a limestone quarry,
chipping away at white rock under a bright and merciless sun — without
benefit of protective eyewear — had virtually destroyed his tear ducts
and, for years, robbed Mandela even of his ability to cry.
Yet, the man insisted on forgiveness. “To go to prison because of your
convictions,” he said, “and be prepared to suffer for what you believe
in, is something worthwhile. It is an achievement for a man to do his
duty on earth irrespective of the consequences.”
By the time I finally came face to face with Nelson Mandela, he had
already been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and elected president of a
land in which he and all other black people had previously been refused
suffrage. He had become an icon, not only of hope, but also of the
possibility for healing.
I was relatively new to politics then, a member of Parliament and
minister of communications. It was my first time in Cape Town. I had
stayed out late with friends and was waiting to take the lift up to my
hotel room. When the doors opened, there was Mandela. I took a step
back, and froze. As he exited, Mandela glanced in my direction and
nodded. I could not return the gesture. I couldn’t move, not even to
blink. I just stood there in awe, thinking: here was the man for whom we
had marched, sung and wept; the man from the black-and-white
photograph. Here was the man who had created a new moral compass for
South Africa and, as a matter of course, the entire continent.
It is no coincidence that in the years since Mandela’s release so much
of Africa has turned toward democracy and the rule of law. His
utilization of peace as a vehicle of liberation showed Africa that if we
were to move beyond the divisiveness caused by colonization, and the
pain of our self-inflicted wounds, compassion and forgiveness must play a
role in governance. Countries, like people, must acknowledge the trauma
they have experienced, and they must find a way to reconcile, to make
what was broken whole again.
That night, as I watched Mandela walk past me, I understood that his
story, the long walk to freedom, was also Africa’s story. The
indignation that once permeated our continent has been replaced by
inspiration. The undercurrent of pessimism resulting from the onslaught
of maladies — wars, coups, disease, poverty and oppression — has given
way to a steadily increasing sense of possibility.
It wasn’t just Nelson Mandela who was transformed during those years of
his imprisonment. We all were. And Africa is all the better because of
that.
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