It was Thursday
night and I was making my way to a friend's place who was leaving
South Africa for Chile the next day. I hadn't seen her for months and
was excited to be able to finally catch up. Having move to Pretoria a
year a go, and not owning a television, I always have Talk 702 on.
It's a great radio station, with brilliant news coverage, and gives a
newbie like me an exceptional insight into the workings of the South
African nation. It was around 9pm and the news was this: an emergency
family meeting had been called at Nelson Mandela's home in
Johannesburg, and there had been speculation about his grandson
Mandela rushing out of his own trial earlier in the day.
We all knew it
was going to happen, and many had been continually praying that it
would happen sooner rather than later. Most of us believed that he
was being kept alive by a life support machine and that the family
were taking their time in switching it off; trying to resolve family
feuds over the estate before putting 'Madiba' to rest. It seemed a
cruel irony that a man that had attempted to bring peace to the world
presided over a such fiery cauldron of bitterness and descent within
his own family. The Mandela family seemed to be more concerned about
their financial cut of 'Madiba Magic' than his legacy, to the point
that his own grandson Mandala was willing to desecrate the graves of
his own ancestors and move their bodies to his land in a bid to cash
in on the potential passing tourist trade. Or was it more to do with
ancestral traditions that you go back to the village or soil on which
you were born? Who knows? And it was not for us to judge, anyway. We
had not spent years of our lives brutalised by an oppressive regime
and had our personal family life unwillingly sacrificed and broken
for the benefit of a nation. The Mandela family pain was beyond what
most humans can bare and all strung out and serialised for us in a
never ending tragic stream of books, films and media snippets. They
deserved their privacy: few were willing to give it to them.
Now at the party,
with the red wine flowing, I announced that it was likely that Nelson
Mandela was 'going to snuff it tonight', which surprises me given the
absolute reverence I have for the man. The party was swinging, and we
were discussing the uber-conservative attitude of Pretorian's towards
lesbians. Despite being one of the first countries in the world to
legalize gay marriage, it's easy to say that many South African's
have failed to embraced the liberal base of the 'Rainbow Nation'
South African constitution as part of their national consciousness.
It was under this backdrop that I learned of Madiba's death. Phoning
home to extend the night out, wanting to stay over, Victor my partner
sounded sombre. “Can I tell you something?” “Of course you can
tell me something. What is it?” “Nelson Mandela is dead.” It
was hard to say what my reaction was; it wasn't exactly shock as I
turned to the girls to tell them the news, “Your kidding?” With
the utmost sincerity “No I'm not.” There was fumbling for the
television remote control and there the news appeared from CNN
splashed over the screen with a green tinged picture. “Where's the
South African News Channel?” I asked, slightly aghast. I was
hearing the news from an American while sitting in Africa. They
couldn't find it. The beautifully blonde presenter spouted out some
archaic shit about the life of this great man who's life really
couldn't be encompassed by words. Then came Jacob Zuma, a president
loathed by many South Africans, and if not on actual trial,
perpetually on media trail for lacking any kind of moral compass. On
most occasions it had been unanimously decided that it was better
that he shouldn't speak unless absolutely necessary. Now here he was
delivering the fateful news that Madiba, Father of the Nation, Tata,
was dead. With a group of Afrikaner girls who had barely been alive
the length of time Mandela had been in prison, I curled up on the
couch and cried. Then we took out the candles a lit them.
We were grief
stricken, but they didn't feel what I felt. I felt the world change.
I phoned friends and family back home, some had heard the news, some
hadn't; to none was the news a blasé interruption to be overlooked
in a few days time. When a fifty-five year old Liverpudlian sheds a
tear for someone you know that man is loved. We all loved him.
Then came Obama,
and then came Cameron. For a moment I gave Cameron the benefit of the
doubt and took his words to be sincere. Then I remembered the Young
Conservative posters that had been fluttering around Facebook months
earlier. “Remember when David Cameron pays tribute to Mandela he
was making 'Hang Nelson Mandela' posters as a member of the Young
Conservatives.” For a moment it made me angry, then it made me sad.
Then I was disappointed. If only David Cameron had opened his speech
the way Obama had. “One of my first political acts was to make
posters that said 'Hang Nelson Mandela'. Having lived through his
release and election as the first democratically elected president of
South Africa, I now realise I was wrong.” After all it was what
Madiba would have wanted. Madiba had already forgiven him and so
should he. Such an act would have also shown the power of the man
with the ability to bring together and reconcile the most extreme of
view points. I decided to drive home via the Union Buildings, hoping
that someone would be there. There was no one, not even at Church
Square where Mandela had been sentenced to life imprisonment at the
Rivonia trial. This surprised me.
The next day was
grey, a proper overcast grey. It is quite unusual weather here in
South Africa. We were a nation in mourning. Nobody cracked a smile,
not a proper one. Everyone was sheepish, removed, going through the
motions, rather than their cheerful engaging selves. Victor phoned
work to check everyone was there and I was teary; the kind of teary
when you just think about it and you well up. The world had changed.
I had a beauty appointment, and blabbered away for what seemed like
hours with my therapist. You see, most Afrikaners didn't know much
about Nelson Mandela, and when they did find out they were assured it
was something that would blow over. I think increasingly, over the
years, the Afrikaners themselves have been on a tremendous journey of
growth from guilt to anger, and now gratitude. They know only too
well that they could have ended up like Zimbabwe, if it hadn't been
for Madiba. He saved the country. We also had to talk about the
sometimes overt racism among some people, and the ever to near rumour
of 'The Night of the Long Knives'. Some Afrikaners believe on the day
after Nelson Mandela's funeral there will be a full scale black
revolt against the whites. This rumour stems from a prophecy of
Seiner van Rensburgh a Boer minister who died in 1926. Strangely
enough, in the same prophecy he also saw the burial of a great black
leader in a glass coffin. Afrikaners and blacks alike widely dismiss
it as nonsense, but you know. There is always one. In some ways this
rumour here in Pretoria has largely surrounded the imminence of
Mandela's death.
I went to sign
the condolence book the next morning, turning up just as it opened.
Within minutes the queue was a couple of hundred people long. One guy
asked to leave the queue to say hello to a friend. Someone degraded
him for it; another said “What would Madiba do?”
When it was first
announced that Mandela was ill, in June, the second night after he
was admitted we headed down to the Medi-Clinic Heart Hospital,
Pretoria fearing the worst. The media literally circled like
vultures, and along the road at the hospital there were tens of media
teams with generators on full blast and burring away. Of course, the
film crews had set up next to the hospital entrance hall. It was off
putting to see the potential passing of a great man consumed in such
a way; the world's media forcing their way into many people's private
distress, especially that of the Mandela family as they went to and
from the hospital. I wanted to light a candle, but chose not to under
the intense media glare.
Oddly Victor and
I had been invited to attend a wedding in Houghton on Saturday 8th.
So we also had the opportunity to go to Mandela's house. That was
strange. I remembered Diana, even in Glasgow there there was a silent
hush that fell over her memorials. At the Mandela house we followed
another corridor of media well wishers, and now hawkers hoping to
make a well intentioned quick buck or self-promotion. Selfies ruled,
with people lacking enough restraint to remember not to smile. I
wasn't so much a memorial to one of the greatest men in history, but
a storm of self validation for those who had made it to the moment.
We brought a candle and lit it. It the meantime people sung and
danced in circles, people of all races, joining in at any given time.
There must have been 200 hundred people ebbing and flowing from the
site, while close-by some guy had found an audience for his views on
African communism.
The sky remained
grey and I debated as to whether I wanted to go to Soweto or not.
Back and forward I shifted. They were expecting massive crowds,
beyond the capacity of a 90,000 seater stadium. Buses were running
from all over the country. It was a 4am start for all. I knew Mandela
was going to lie in state in Pretoria, so decided against the trip to
Soweto. I wanted to see his coffin; to be in his presence. It
bucketed down with rain, so Victor and I decided to buy a television
instead, enabling us to watch the memorial live. I was disappointed:
too long; too much tribute, and not enough action. Obama was great
(except for the fact Guantanamo was still a news story, along with
the black hills) The Chinese President made it a mockery, behaving
more like it was a trade conference than a memorial for a human right
activist. China's shame was further enhanced by the absence of the
Dalai Lama, due to the fact that he probably wouldn't have been given
a visa, having been already refused twice by the South African
government. It poured that day all day, and I have been told that in
Africa it's a blessing. Truly in Gauteng it doesn't rain like that
often.
I had made a
commitment to see Madiba, and had chosen just to make sure that I
would see him in cortège at the very least. I was pretty lucky. I
had friend who had lived opposite the Union Buildings and had decided
to stay there overnight before Madiba arrived. I slept in the bright
lights of the Union Buildings. I had been there only a few weeks
before, and I had counted only four lights on, expecting somehow for
Zuma to walk past the window. Now I counted over 20, the buildings
illuminated for the the whole world to see, and the world's media was
watching. It was an early start and the sirens sporadically fired
through the night. The military arrived in convoy first armoured cars
and then busses filed with soldiers, hundreds of them. We watched
them fill out, waiting for orders when suddenly they all ran into the
Union Gardens. They'd all gone to take a piss before what would be
hours of work. We were on the corner of Madiba and Government Street
and could watch it all form the rooftop.
ABC had been
renting parts of the building for years, and yet on the roof there
was nothing. I decided to get down on the street for the coffin's
passing. There seemed to be a very small crowd. A friend and I ran a
block down to find larger crowds and groups singing some kind of
lament. To hear people singing that way, to a Europeans at least, is
unusual. It vibrates through your whole body. You think of the film
Zulu and you feel the meaning saturate your soul in words you can't
understand. A lady was giving out small South Africa flags for free.
All of a sudden I thought of Diana. We need to get some flowers, I
thought, and we ran into the mall. It was 6.30am. The supermarket was
closed. Luckily, as we ran upstairs to the next level, we found one
singular florist open. I bought a bunch of yellow roses for
friendship and my friend bought some yellow asters. We thought yellow
was fitting as it is one of the colours of the South African and ANC
flags, representing the sun and riches of the soil. We ran back to
the corner of Madiba and Government street and started handing out
the flowers for people to throw in front of the hearse. The media was
all set up to get a wide angle shot of the funeral car travelling up
Madiba Street, then all of a sudden the police moved in and wanted
everyone to move. It was ridiculous. A lot of people were angry, and
the policing and the military seemed very overstated for such a
sombre moment of peaceful passing of respects. The hearse flashed by
with the coffin in the back covered with the South African flag. I
threw my rose. It missed.
After that I went
back to the rooftop and watched a crowd a 1000 strong grow, singing
and dancing. At one point a loud speaker was produced and and
official started to announce that they would now put buses on from
this point to the Union Buildings. The crowd spilt, half staying
where they were singing and dancing, the other half heading off on a
march round the block that would be repeated several times. In the
building, in the lift, we could still hear the people outside
singing. It was an incredible sound. I stayed in the house trying to
catch up on my sleep, and the marching crowed would go past as if
singing, and wave of music would fill the whole flat. It struck me
that the state funeral had been designed for an European audience,
that would accept their role in history, line the route, and
submissively melt away once it was over. It wasn't an European state
funeral: it was an African one. Filled with singing, dancing, and
celebration..
Eventually we saw
from the balcony that people had started to queue. As I was here I
thought I would take my chances, rather than getting up at 6am to go
to the pack and ride at VC Villiers, the Pretoria University Sports
Ground. My friend joined me.
We queued for six
hours to see the great man himself on Wednesday. Brilliantly unusual
atmosphere, the hawkers took care of our queuing needs, drinks,
frozen juice, umbrellas (for the sun), the works. Everyone in the
queue was supportive, they let you jump in and out with no problems
and we warned them people might join us and they had no problem with
that and vice a versa. We were meant to get on buses to the Union
Buildings but in the end they let us walk up to the Union Buildings.
They completely altered the queue and got everyone to hold hands.
That was quite special. The military stepped in and told us "Hold
hands and don't let go" and then a policeman said "It's
what Mandela would have wanted, for us to all hold hands and be
joined together". Well worth the wait. Very special moment
indeed, one I will never forget. I was totally thrown off step by
seeing Mandela's grandson right next to the coffin, watching over
him. It was also a great privilege. Honoured and humbled to see
Mandela, he looked beautiful and at peace. Adrio, my friend, dropped
his head and remained silent for most of the walk back down through
the Union Buildings Gardens.
Today I had
intended to go to the top of Klapperkoppie to see the plane take off
from Waterkloof. Victor had an errand to run before going to work, so
it wasn't possible. We were blessed all the same to see the plane
take off with two fighter jets and circle back round us as we
travelled along the road. Madiba was going home to as a great
peacemaking warrior to where he wanted to be: among the rolling hills
of his true people. I couldn't help but sit in the car and cry.
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