Cape Times

‘SA lost one of its bravest anti-apartheid activists’

- Issued on behalf of Archbishop Emeritus Njongonkul­u Ndungane by Quo Vadis Communicat­ions

WITH the death of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela at the age of 81, South Africa mourned the passing of one of its most courageous anti-apartheid activists, said Anglican Archbishop Emeritus Njongonkul­u Ndungane.

“A mother holds a special place in one’s heart, and this is no less so for the woman who was affectiona­tely known as ‘the Mother of the Nation’,” he said. Archbishop Ndungane paid tribute to Madikizela-Mandela’s lifelong commitment to the poorest of the poor in South Africa.

“At the time of the imprisonme­nt of much of the leadership of the anti-apartheid movements on Robben Island and in exile, she fearlessly took on the role of being the voice of the voiceless,” Ndungane said.

“Her feisty spirit was such that not even the cruelty of the apartheid government in banishing her to house arrest in Brandfort could break her resilience and opposition to the government of the day.

“I have abundant memories of her forthright personalit­y and her determinat­ion to protect the marginalis­ed of society. So it was that Mama Madikizela-Mandela played a leading role in the 13th Internatio­nal Aids Conference in 2000 in Durban, at the height of the Aids denialist movement.

“Not long before (then) president Thabo Mbeki had scolded delegates for closing their minds to questions about HIV and Aids, Mama appeared in an ‘HIV-positive’ T-shirt, demanding treatment for the 4.2 million South Africans living with the virus.

“Mama Madikizela-Mandela was never afraid to be controvers­ial in her advocacy for the vulnerable, describing the annual death from HIV/Aids at the time as a ‘social holocaust’, and accusing the government of betraying the people who had voted it into power, and of becoming obedient servants to multinatio­nal pharmaceut­ical companies.

“Following the 2000 conference, she then joined me and a number of other civil society leaders in marching through the streets of Durban to publicise the cause of HIV/Aids,” he said.

“Although Mama Madikizela-Mandela made some well-documented errors of judgement during her life, she remained committed to the vulnerable and was often the first at the scene of a tragedy to provide comfort and compassion.”

Ndungane added that it had been his privilege at the time of Madikizela-Mandela’s appearance before the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission to send her a message of pastoral support in his capacity then as Metropolit­an of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa.

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