The Citizen (KZN)

There is a need to balance some Madiba hype. Nelson Mandela’s legacy is imperfect.

- Martin Williams

Nelson Mandela, whose 100th birthday we commemorat­e today, could not have possessed all the qualities attributed to him by people who did not know him. How we choose to remember him reflects our views, rather than his character. Remember, Madiba asserted he was no saint, “unless you think of a saint as a sinner who keeps on trying”.

I am a Madiba fan but there is a need to balance some hype. His legacy is imperfect.

His beloved ANC is divided, due in part to former president Jacob Zuma, who was helped by a R1 million gift from Madiba. What do we make of that decision by the great man? Would he have donated if he could have foreseen how Zuma’s relationsh­ip with money would shape South Africa’s future?

Mandela’s role in the 1994 Shell House massacre is glossed over; so too his 1993 call for the voting age to be lowered to 14. If Mandela was wise and selfless, those characteri­stics are not shared by a family squabbling over assets.

Such greed could besmirch the legacy of a founder of our democracy. Or not. Can we sit in judgment of a family whose core was disrupted by the hardships inflicted on Mandela and his partner over many decades? Judge not, lest ye be judged.

While I cannot claim to have known Mandela, I did meet him several times (Madiba: my memories, The Citizen supplement, December 9, 2013). He was indeed inspiratio­nal. We can be grateful he ultimately chose the path of reconcilia­tion. We can be guided by the ideals captured in Madiba quotes for all occasions.

But we should not live in the past, mythologis­ing halcyon Madiba days.

SA’s prospects right now include spiralling household and national debt; price hikes; falling property prices and rising rate payments for the middle classes; daily invasions of urban land; lurking crime and grime – and an uncosted, unaffordab­le national health insurance scheme under the control of folks who can scarcely run a bath, never mind administer hospitals.

We have the idolised Madiba to look up to, but should not be mesmerised into inaction by his long shadow. We still have a country to fix.

Lamenting the passing of the Madiba era and reciting his wise words, may bring some reassuranc­e. The danger is that it reinforces ANC mythology.

And the ANC, riddled with corruption and infighting, is incapable of implementi­ng policies that will lead SA to prosperity.

Both President Cyril Ramaphosa and Mandela had legal training and both contribute­d significan­tly to South Africa’s founding constituti­on. Yet, like Zuma, they prioritise ANC unity. The party’s current slogan captures this: “100 Years of Nelson Mandela: the year of renewal, unity and jobs.”

Forget about jobs. There will be no real job creation under ANC corruption. If party unity means protecting crooks, the country cannot prosper.

We know that Zuma placed the ANC above the constituti­on. Whether Mandela did so is debatable. What matters more now is how much Ramaphosa will compromise for the sake of the ANC.

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