Sunday Times

I remember a man of contradict­ions

Nelson Mandela’s policy of reconcilia­tion avoided a bloodbath, but his loyalty to his comrades went too far, writes Zakes Mda

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IREMEMBER Nelson Mandela. No, not the universall­y adored elder statesman who successful­ly resisted the megalomani­a that comes with deificatio­n, and who died on Thursday at age 95, but the young lawyer who used to sit in my parents’ living room until the early hours of the morning, debating African nationalis­m with my father, Ashby Peter Mda.

In 1944, they were among the leaders who had founded the ANC Youth League. These young men considered the ANC, which had by then existed for more than three decades, moribund and outmoded. They felt there was a need to take the liberation struggle from protest to armed struggle and were known to shout down those they felt were “selling out” by participat­ing in apartheid-created structures through which black people were supposed to express their political aspiration­s.

What struck me, even then, was that Mandela was a man of contradict­ions. He could be avuncular, especially to us kids, but he was also strict and discipline­d.

Although he was a firebreath­ing revolution­ary who would quote Marx and Lenin at the drop of a hat, he was also a Xhosa traditiona­list with aristocrat­ic tendencies. For instance, Kaiser and George Matanzima, chiefs of the Tembu ethnic group who spearheade­d the apartheid “Bantustan” system of separate territorie­s for black South Africans, were not only his relatives but his friends as well.

Although many thought the Matanzima brothers had betrayed the cause of black liberation, Mandela would not thoroughly denounce them. Perhaps here we could already see the flicker of tolerance to those with opposing views for which he later distinguis­hed himself.

It is ironic that in today’s South Africa there is an increasing­ly vocal segment of black South Africans who feel that Mandela sold out the liberation struggle to white interests. This will come as a surprise to the internatio­nal community, which informally canonised him and thinks he enjoyed universal adoration in his country. After he initiated negotiatio­ns for the end of apartheid and led South Africa into a new era of freedom with a progressiv­e constituti­on that recognises the rights of everyone (including homosexual­s, another admirable contradict­ion for an African aristocrat), there was, of course, euphoria in the country. But that was a long time ago. With the rampant corruption of the current ruling elite and the fact that little has changed for a majority of black people, the euphoria has been replaced with disillusio­nment.

The new order that Mandela brought about, this argument goes, did not fundamenta­lly change the economic arrangemen­ts in the country. It ushered in prosperity, but the distributi­on of that prosperity was skewed in favour of the white establishm­ent and its dependent new black elite. Today, the political apparatchi­ks are the new billionair­es, led by a president — Jacob Zuma — who blatantly used millions of taxpayer rands to upgrade his private residence to accommodat­e his expanding harem and a phalanx of children.

The blame-Mandela movement is not by any means a groundswel­l, but it is loud enough in its vehemence to warrant attention. It is led by individual activists whose main platforms are Facebook, Twitter and other social media, and, in its formal sense, by such organisati­ons as the September National Imbizo, which believes that “South Africa is an antiblack white supremacis­t country managed by the ANC in the interests of white people. Only blacks can liberate themselves.” The claim is that

He could be avuncular, especially to us kids, but he was also strict and discipline­d. Although he was a revolution­ary who would quote Marx and Lenin at the drop of a hat, he was also a Xhosa traditiona­list with aristocrat­ic tendencies

the settlement reached between the ANC and the white apartheid government was a fraud perpetrate­d on the black people, who have yet to get back the land stolen by whites during colonialis­m. Mandela’s government, critics say, focused on the cosmetics of reconcilia­tion while nothing materially changed in the lives of a majority of South Africans.

This movement, although not representa­tive of the majority of black South Africans who still adore Mandela and his ANC, is gaining momentum, especially on university campuses.

I understand the frustratio­ns of those young South Africans and I share their disillusio­nment. I, however, do not share their perspectiv­e on Mandela.

I saw in him a skilful politician whose policy of reconcilia­tion saved the country from a bloodbath and ushered it into a period of democracy, human rights and tolerance. I admired him for his compassion and generosity, values not usually associated with politician­s.

I also admired him for his integrity and loyalty.

But I fear that, for Mandela, loyalty went too far. The corruption we see today did not just suddenly erupt after his term in office; it took root during his time. He was loyal to his comrades to a fault and was therefore blind to some of their misdeeds.

When he was president, I often wrote about the emerging patronage system and crony capitalism. To his credit, when I wrote him a long letter outlining my concerns, he phoned me within a week and arranged a meeting between me and three of his senior cabinet ministers. Although nothing of substance came of the meeting, the very fact that Mandela listened attentivel­y to the complaints of an ordinary citizen — and took them seriously enough to convene such a meeting — was extraordin­ary for any president.

In later years, however, Mandela became the victim of the very corruption I was complainin­g about. He was surrounded by all sorts of characters, friends and relatives, some of whom were keen to profit from his name.

Mandela leaves a proud legacy of freedom and human rights, of tolerance and reconcilia­tion. Alas, some of his compatriot­s are trampling on it. I cannot speak for him and say he was pained by what he saw happening to his country in his last days. I had not spoken with him for years before he died. But I can say the Mandela I knew would have been pained. —© The New York Times

Mda, a professor of creative writing at Ohio University, is author of ‘Sometimes There Is a Void: Memoirs of an Outsider’

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES ?? LAW AND DISORDER: Nelson Mandela as a young lawyer
Picture: GALLO IMAGES LAW AND DISORDER: Nelson Mandela as a young lawyer

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