Mr Mandela by Trenton and Free Radical ft, with Cape Philharmonic Orchestra

Raymond Suttner: Arundhati Roy on the buying off of Mandela and ANC by big capital: The engaged intellectual cannot empower people where there is no humility

According to Arundhati Roy, in part of a talk published on You Tube, 12 June 2013 when the struggle in South Africa  ‘started ‘it was the Black consciousness (BC) people who were most powerful Continue reading

Channel 4 discussion on spiritual effect of family disputes, impeding Mandela’s passing away

http://www.channel4.com/news/mandela-s-spirit-how-tribal-leaders-look-at-death-video?fb_action_ids=403298416449461&fb_action_types=og.recommends&fb_source=aggregation&fb_aggregation_id=288381481237582

Raymond Suttner: Understanding contemporary South Africa requires careful study

No matter how shocking the evidence of corruption in contemporary South Africa may be Continue reading

Zapiro cartoon on anniversary of Rivonia trial

http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/1746637-130711mg#.Ud_I2RbH0y4

Discussion on Mandela family disputes including Chief Phatekile Holomisa and Nomboniso Gasa

Raymond Suttner, Nelson Mandela as a model of manhood

Whereas earlier studies of gender concentrated on women, recent decades have seen a flourishing of literature on masculinities, Continue reading

Raymond Suttner, Notions of manhood: Initiation tragedies should not blind us to dangers beyond those that are part of public discourse

 

The ANC and the Minister of Health have correctly deplored the spate of deaths resulting from initiation practices, in the Eastern Cape and other areas.  Continue reading

Raymond Suttner, Why grieve over Mandela’s imminent passing?

I try to understand why I am so upset about Mandela’s imminent passing.  Continue reading

Phumi Mtetwa, It is thanks to the bill of rights that the rainbow flag can fly proudly over the rainbow nation

Phumi Mtetwa, It is thanks to the bill of rights that the rainbow flag can fly proudly over the rainbow nation

Mandela and Fidel Castro -footage including Madiba wearing Cuban shirt at rally

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8nfQX5znuY

In 1991 Nelson Mandela, as newly elected ANC president, succeeding the ailing Oliver Tambo, visited various Latin American states. I was part of the back up on that tour. In Cuba the meeting with Fidel Castro saw an immediate bonding between the two. At the rally to celebrate the attack on the Moncada barracks, Mandela wore the Cuban Guayabera shirt, as seen in the clip. Mandela thanked Cuba for their support to liberation movements, notably in the battle of Cuito Cuanavale where the South African Defence Force was defeated and pushed out of Angola. Fidel responded to Mandela with a very warm tribute to his qualities.

When the ANC delegation met with Fidel and his aides,Madiba gave a summary of the process of negotiations. Then he said that the ANC could still walk out of the talks. Fidel, who had listened very attentively, responded by asking, what would the strategy then be to arrive at the ANC’s goals? Mandela did not have an answer, for he may have merely raised the option without any sense of it being realistic for he was committed to the negotiations succeeding. In some ways it appeared like the a resurfacing of the impetuous younger Mandela, albeit purely in conversation.

In the course of the visit, posters of Mandela were everywhere and songs were composed in his honour. On a visit to a sports complex, Mandela whose boxing persona remained very much part of his identity, asked ‘what has happened to Stevenson?’ referring to the famous Cuban heavyweight who won the olympic title three times. Fidel responded that Stevenson was there and called him up to where they were standing and the two boxers embraced.

Nelson Mandela, first TV interview, 1961

The interview was conducted while Mandela was underground and being hunted by the police. It is noteworthy for various reasons. In referring to the franchise, the interviewer refers to formal education as a requirement for political activity and Mandela makes it very clear that black people in South Africa understood their political aspirations, whether or not they had access to formal education, then generally denied under apartheid. The interview may also be the first time that Mandela indicates that the response of the apartheid regime was compelling the liberation movement to reconsider its previous commitment to purely non-violent forms of resistance.

Around this time, not having any idea who Mandela was, I used to catch the bus at the Cape Town parade to go to my school, which was in Newlands. There used to be notices at the bus stop referring to ‘any meeting in regard to Nelson Mandela.’ I did not know what that was about although I was fairly politically conscious. But I like many other whites was then cut off from what the ANC had to say

Article on Graca Machel, wife of Nelson Mandela

Article on Graca Machel, wife of Nelson Mandela

Raymond Suttner, The influence of Walter Sisulu and Moses Kotane in moulding the political development of Nelson Mandela

There is no doubt that Mandela was at times after his release more popular than the ANC and that he could sometimes act without organisational authority. Continue reading

Raymond Suttner: Mandela as underground ‘black pimpernel’, late 1961-a glimpse

Below is a glimpse of Mandela operating underground as the ‘black pimpernel’ before his arrest in 1962. Continue reading

Mandela dances with Statistics South Africa choir on presentation of 1996 census results

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Thank you to Tony McGregor for photographs

Raymond Suttner, Mandela:strong, tough and tender

Mandela as boxerMadibaandchild

There is a myth that to be strong and manly one cannot also be tender and gentle. Mandela, in a range of ways dispels any such myth. Thereby his life is a challenge to tough and violent masculinities, that are all too prevalent in South Africa today. For Mandela there were times where he found it necessary to fight, both as a boxer and in MK, times where he had to show his strength as in prison. But this photograph with a baby is only one of a range of manifestations of his tenderness.