The Palm Beach Post

S. Africans bid farewell to Madikizela-Mandela

Liberation fighter was former wife of Nelson Mandela.

- By Robyn Dixon Los Angeles Times

South Africans bid farewell to liberation fighter Winnie Madikizela-Mandela Saturday in a stirring funeral service at Orlando Stadium in Soweto, with power salutes, tribute songs, tears and cheers.

The funeral ended more than a week of mourning for Madikizela-Mandela, one of the last of the generation of revered anti-apartheid leaders who won freedom for their people.

The succession of memorials and parades since she died April 2 recalled the outpouring of grief in 2013 after the death of her former husband, Nelson Mandela, who became the face of the South African liberation struggle, partly due to her efforts.

The marathon farewell underscore­d Madikizela-Mandela’s ability to connect with a young, new generation of black South Africans, demanding radical change to overcome apartheid’s lingering toxic legacy.

Tough, determined, resilient and proud, she withstood imprisonme­nt, solitary confinemen­t, banishment and years of harassment by South African apartheid authoritie­s.

Julius Malema, populist leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, paid tribute to Madikizela-Mandela this week by saying: “Such people do not die. They live eternally because their seeds always survive the toughest of conditions. The seeds of a tree grew, even in concrete. They are indestruct­ible.”

“She was rightly seen as the mother of this nation but Mama Winnie was much more than that. She was a heroine of the whole continent, a courageous symbol of resilience for all of us,” Campbell said at the service Saturday.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa paid tribute to her with the salute, “Long live, Winnie Mandela, long live!”

“She has been our big mama throughout our life.”

Ramaphosa said the apartheid regime in South Africa tried to crush her by imprisonin­g and banishing her to the remote rural town of Brandt in 1997, but it could not do so.

“They wanted to see her broken, with bowed head and weakened cries, but still she rose,” Ramaphosa said.

“Proud, defiant, articulate she exposed the lie of apartheid. She laid bare the edifice of patriarchy. Loudly and without apology, she spoke truth to power.”

Ramaphosa called Madikizela-Mandela a giant, a pathfinder, a healer and an eternal beauty. He said she suffered, often alone.

There was a troubling side to her legacy — including her support for the use of “necklacing” by struggle activists during the apartheid era to punish people suspected of being informers to apartheid security police. The practice involved fastening tires filled with gasoline around victims’ necks and setting the fuel afire.

Also controvers­ial were the role of her bodyguards in Soweto in the 1980s, known as the Mandela United Football Club. They abducted people, held them at her home, beat them and tortured and killed some.

In 1999, her head bodyguard, Jerry Richardson, told the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission that on her orders, he had assaulted a 14-year-old boy, Stompie Moeketsi, also known as Stompie Seipei, for days in Madikizela-Mandela’s home in 1989 before killing the boy with garden shears. He said he also killed a young woman on her orders, and witnessed two other killings. The victims were suspected of being police informers.

Madikizela-Mandela was convicted of the boy’s abduction and of being an accessory to assault and was sentenced to six years in prison. Her sentence was reduced to a fine on appeal.

 ?? OUPA MOKOENA / ANA / REALTIME / ZUMA PRESS ?? The body of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela is carried during funeral services at Orlando Stadium in Soweto on Saturday.
OUPA MOKOENA / ANA / REALTIME / ZUMA PRESS The body of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela is carried during funeral services at Orlando Stadium in Soweto on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States