The Asian Age

Afrikaner PA fondly remembers Mandela

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Cape Town: One of Nelson Mandela’s closest and most unlikely friendship­s was with Zelda La Grange, a white Afrikaner secretary who rose to be his personal aide, travelling companion and confidante.

As South Africa celebrates 100 years since Mandela’s birth, La Grange sat down with AFP to remember the man she worked for over 19 extraordin­ary years.

OUR FIRST ENCOUNTER

“I pretty much considered these men as the enemy. I was afraid, and then this kind gentleman stood in front of me. The first thing I noticed was the kindness on his face and the sincerity of his smile and he extended his hand waiting from me to reciprocat­e.

“He held my hand into a very firm grip and spoke to me.

“I had to say ‘ Excuse me Mr. President, could you repeat.’ I realised he was speaking in Afrikaans — my own language and the language of the oppressor and the people who imprisoned him.

“He destroyed my defences immediatel­y. It was a very emotional moment, I felt guilty because this person extended respect to me which I think at that point I didn’t deserve. I started crying.”

VIRTUES AND VICES

“He had the ability to respect any human being. When he looked in a person’s eyes, he was really paying attention, he was really interested in that person. It was definitely his greatest strength and he always choose humanity over ideology.

“People saw him and dealt with him as a statesman and a famous icon, but very few people acknowledg­ed him as a human being with the vices and virtues that he often reminded us he had.

“He was a sensitive person. He could be a very stubborn human being and when he took decisions... it was very difficult to change his mind.”

100 PER CENT TRUST

“We often had political discussion­s over lunch or when we were travelling and we were sometimes arguing about the past and apartheid. “It was never in a confrontat­ional way, it was always in a respectful way because he understood where I came from.

“He knew that he could trust me 100 percent and he appreciate­d that. For me profession­ally, the trust that he invested in me was the highlight of my career.”

FLASHES OF ANGER

“He was a very meticulous kind of person. He was very strict, very discipline­d, he hated people prescribin­g to him or trying to manipulate him.

“There were very few things that really made him angry — dishonesty was always making him angry.”

INNER SADNESS

“I noticed the damage from him being isolated from his family for so many years. It was very difficult for him to establish relationsh­ips... that’s one of the things he felt sorry about.

“There was a sad part in Nelson Mandela and it was only when he married Graca Machel that he really enjoyed the things we take for granted — like going out in a restaurant.

 ?? — AFP ?? Zelda la Grange, former private secretary to former South African president and Nobel Prize winner Nelson Mandela.
— AFP Zelda la Grange, former private secretary to former South African president and Nobel Prize winner Nelson Mandela.

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