Look at this picture. It's easy for us to get misty-eyed, and remember the man of peace, but look at him. This is a tough guy. Twenty-seven years in prison, and when twice offered his release he refused because it was based on the condition of renouncing violence as a political weapon.
Like George Washington, he could have been president for life, but unlike every other African leader who overthrew a colonial power he established stability and stepped down after one term.
We knew this day was coming. He was ninety-five and in poor health. Each new report made me feel that people were trying to hold onto him, make him struggle beyond any human endurance, simply because nobody wanted to bear the loss.
My first political activity in Vermont, back about thirty years ago, was working on divestment of state funds from companies doing business in South Africa. While Mandela did more than any of us could do, American activists were proud to play a small part in maintaining pressure on the apartheid regime, even when Ronald Reagan was supporting it.
The mourning will be universal, and rightly so.
I was only an ignorant seventh grader when he entered prison. I hadn’t even heard about Apartheid before then; I had barely learned about slavery and systemic segregation, still very much a reality in my own country!
Twenty-seven years behind bars and he still managed to change the world for better.
Makes you ask yourself, ‘what’s my excuse for accomplishing so little?’
Yep, we all love us some Mandela now that he’s dead. But there’s this:
Mandela was on the US terrorist watch list until 2008. Two-thousand-frickin’-eight!
Mandela and the African National Congress had been placed on the list by good ol’ Uncle Ronnie back in the 1980s, when it was still (sort of) acceptable in American circles to stand by the apartheid government. For a handy synopsis of a time when Mandela was far from universally beloved, check this out.
Now that he’s safely dead, he can become a universally-beloved icon. Just a few years ago, he was officially a bad guy who would be turned away at the border if he tried to enter.
(A lot of media reports say Mandela was “once” on the list, which makes it sound like a brief moment in time. He was on that list for MORE THAN TWO DECADES. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994, and he stayed on the list for 14 years after that! As Yakov Smirnoff would say, “Wotta country!”)
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