The Star Late Edition

Happy birthday, Winnie!

- STAFF REPORTER

VILAKAZI Street in Soweto was painted green and gold yesterday afternoon as the ANC Women’s League hosted a mega party for Winnie Madikizela-Mandela’s 80th birthday celebratio­n.

The partygoers were treated to cupcakes, song, dance and praise poetry as the Struggle stalwart looked on happily.

Her great-grandchild­ren accompanie­d Madikizela-Mandela to the lively gig and were entertaine­d along with the crowd by maskandi performers and singers.

There was a special performanc­e by women from the Chinese Business Women’s Associatio­n who, dressed in traditiona­l Chinese outfits, danced gently while twirling colourful paper umbrellas.

Another internatio­nal guest was Ventrice Morgan, a Jamaican reggae singer better know as Queen Ifrica, who performed a song for Madikizela-Mandela. Morgan is infamous for the homophobic comments she made in her home country in 2013.

The day was marked by a short address by ANC Women’s League president Bathabile Dlamini, who said that though they didn’t have a name to announce yet, the ANC was ready for a woman president.

“Forgive us, we didn’t understand things back then,” she said, referring to when Mandela declined nomination for ANC deputy president in 1997.

She added: ““Young women must learn resilience from Mama Winnie.”

Together, Dlamini and Madikizela-Mandela held a knife and cut Winnie’s enormous green cake, superimpos­ed with a picture of the 80-year-old.

As the event came to a close, children and adults thronged around Madikizela-Mandela as she made her way to her black Audi, trying to touch her as they wished her a happy birthday. She shook hands with and smiled at many before she left the party a few minutes before sunset.

Today, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela turns 80, the latest milestone in the remarkable life of South Africa’s most prominent revolution­ary.

Born in Mbizana, Transkei, three years before World War II broke out, she would go on to develop a far fierier reputation than her ex-husband, Nelson Mandela, as she kept the flames of liberation burning through the most tortured years of apartheid.

Ever the most outspoken of her generation of Struggle heroes, as recently as last week, Madikizela-Mandela was saying it was time for fresh leadership in the ANC.

This was the same week in which she managed to draw EFF leader Julius Malema – who is close to her own personalit­y when she was young – to shake hands with Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa. This happened at her birthday party in Cape Town on Wednesday.

Although it is unlikely the country – and, perhaps, the world – will forget when she was surrounded by the notorious Mandela United Football Club, or the tragedy of James “Stompie” Seipei Moeketsi, Madikizela-Mandela has survived her darkest days.

Inside, ANC hero Ahmed Kathrada pays tribute to her astonishin­g spirit as he welcomes her to the club of octogenari­ans, while HRH Prince Jongisilo Pokwana ka Menziwa explains why Madikizela-Mandela is a woman among women in traditiona­l society.

Also inside, King Buyelekhay­a Dalindyebo speaks to her from his prison cell, while South Africa’s most successful film producer, Anant Singh, explains how he developed a relationsh­ip with her through the filming of Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom.

Janet Smith looks at the influence Madikizela-Mandela has had on young black revolution­aries and we hail the seven women who have played her on screen.

Happy birthday, Mama! We wish you strength and longevity.

Remarkable life of SA’s fiery revolution­ary

 ?? PICTURE: ALF KUMALO ?? ICONIC: Winnie Madikizela-Mandela as a young woman.
PICTURE: ALF KUMALO ICONIC: Winnie Madikizela-Mandela as a young woman.

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