Hous
I'm perplexed by your dismissive statement "I think even a layman has a lot to say about Mandela". Are you suggesting Baba is engaged in superflous activity by writing on a matter of 'common expertise'? The popular narrative may be straightforward but the Mandela issue involves deep moral questions. Forgive me if I read you wrongly but your perspective is amenable to multiple interpretations.
Why am I going on this tangent?
I think there is a certain level of disgust with any show of intellectualism in Gambian society. Yet we have no trouble celebrating disgraceful musicians who have nothing to say about the deep moral challenges embedded in our public life. Or to mindlessly celebrate sports personalities, footballers in particular, for winning meaningless trophies when our house can collapse any day from the sheer weight of public lawlessness.
In this period of great challenge, I would rather remind myself of the man Mandela in Baba's illuminating writeup.
LJDarbo
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On Fri, 6/12/13, Husainou <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Subject: Re: [G_L] Mandela’s Abiding Legacy
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: Friday, 6 December, 2013, 1:51
I think even a
layman has a lot to say about Mandela. Allah will be the
judge between him and those who put him into incarceration
for 27 years. A lot could be learned from his
legacy. Hous
On Dec 5, 2013, at 8:36 PM, Baba Galleh Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
Mandela’s Abiding
Legacy
By Baba Galleh Jallow
On Thursday, December 5, 2013, the world received
the news
it has been dreading for the past several years: Nelson
Mandela was dead, aged
95. Born on July 18, 1918, the former South African
president spent 27 years of
his life in prison before being released by F. W. de Klerk,
the last president
of Apartheid South Africa in 1990. In 1994, he became the
first Black President
of South Africa after that country’s first multi-racial,
democratic elections
in over 300 years. After serving a single term of five
years, Mandela stepped
down from the presidency in 1999 and was succeeded to the
post by Thabo Mbeki.
After his retirement from politics, Mandela set up the
Nelson Mandela
Foundation in 1999 and dedicated much time and energy in the
fight against
HIV/AIDS, lack of adequate school buildings in South Africa,
and other
humanitarian causes. During his life time, Mandela has won
over 250 honors, including
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993. He has gone into History as
one of the greatest leaders
the world has ever known and will ever know.
Mandela joined the African National Congress
(ANC) in the
early 1940s. In 1944, he and other young members of the ANC
formed the ANC
Youth League with a mission to further radicalize the
organization. Founded by
John Dube as the South African Native National Congress in
1912, the ANC got
its current name in 1923. Dube was very much influenced by
the ideas of Booker
T. Washington, and because Washington was largely a pacifist
who encouraged
Black Americans to be content to just gain technical skills
which would then
make them acceptable to White society, the early ANC was not
as radical as
Mandela, Luthuli, Sisulu and other young members wanted.
That is why they formed
the ANC Youth League to inject more energy into the
organization.
Mandela and members of the ANC Youth League did
not
immediately turn to violence against the South African
government. Even after
Apartheid became official state policy with the coming into
power of the
Purified National Party in 1948, the ANC still used peaceful
means to advocate
for the rights of black and colored people in South Africa.
But Apartheid
brooked no opposition, however peaceful. In 1956, Mandela,
Luthuli and other 154
members of the ANC were arrested and tried on treason
charges. The trial lasted
until 1961 when all the defendants were acquitted and
discharged. It was not
until the Sharpeville Massacre of 1960 that the ANC leaders
decided that the
only effective way to deal with the Apartheid regime was
through violent revolution.
Consequently, Mandela and his colleagues went underground
and formed Unkhomto we Sizwe (MK) or Spear
of the
Nation in 1961 to engage the Apartheid regime through
guerrilla tactics. In
1962, Mandela was arrested again and sentenced to five years
imprisonment.
While he served his term, further charges of plotting to
overthrow the
government were brought against him. A new trial at Rivonia
found him guilty
and he was sentenced to life imprisonment in June 1964.
First kept in Robben
Island prison, Mandela was transferred to Pollsmoor Prison
and eventually to
Victor Verster Prison from where he was released on February
11, 1990.
Throughout the period of his incarceration, the MK conducted
relentless bombing
campaigns and other acts of guerrilla warfare against the
Apartheid regime from
bases in what were known as the Frontline States: Botswana,
Mozambique, Angola,
Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi, bordering South
Africa to the north.
By 1990, prominent members of the National Party
Government
in South Africa had realized that Apartheid was no longer a
feasible government
policy. The MK’s bombing and guerilla warfare was exacting
a heavy toll on South
Africa’s internal security. Mass protests and
demonstrations especially in the
aftermath of the Soweto riots and massacre of June 1976, and
the state-killing
of Black Consciousness leader Steve Biko in 1977 were making
it impossible for the
South African government to maintain order. By the 1980s,
the anti-Apartheid
movement had become so persistent that Prime Minister P. W.
Botha declared a
state of emergency and launched what he called his Total
Strategy because in
his estimation, his government was under a Total Onslaught
by anti-Apartheid
groups in the country. At the same time, international
pressure against the
Apartheid regime had steadily picked up steam in the 1970s
and gained momentum
in the 1980s. Anti-Apartheid UN Resolutions and protest
marches had become a
common feature of international politics by 1985. When the
U.S. Senate overrode
a veto by President Reagan and passed the Comprehensive
Anti-Apartheid Act in
1986, the Pretoria regime began to crumble in upon itself.
Washington was one
of the strongest supporters of the Apartheid regime since
its inception in
1948, which coincided with the heating up of the Cold War.
Taking advantage of
the anti-communist paranoia in Washington and other Western
capitals, the
Apartheid regime branded the ANC, the Pan-Africanist
Congress, the Black
Consciousness Movement and all other anti-Apartheid groups
communist and
thereby won the unconditional support of successive U.S.
governments. This all
changed in 1986 when the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act
imposed trade and
travel sanctions against South Africa, demanded an end to
Apartheid, called for
the release of Nelson Mandela and asked for a time-table for
the conduct of
democratic elections in that country. When F. W. de Klerk
took over after P. W.
Botha’s resignation in 1989, he knew he had to end
Apartheid or risk letting South
Africa slide into full-blown civil war and economic
ruin.
Mandela and the ANC were swept to power in the
first democratic
elections in South Africa in 342 years. Since Jan van
Riebeck, an agent of the Dutch
East India Company landed at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652,
the majority of
South Africans had suffered racial discrimination and
oppression by a small
group of white rulers and their enablers, including black
South Africans. For
the first time in 1994, the disenfranchised people of South
Africa enjoyed
universal adult suffrage and voted overwhelmingly for
Mandela and the ANC.
Shortly after coming into power, Mandela and the
ANC government
passed the Promotion of National Unity Act which set up the
Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC). Under the
Chairmanship of Bishop Desmond Tutu, the TRC was mandated to
help South
Africans deal with their violent past. Perpetrators of
Apartheid era atrocities
were encouraged to come forward and confess to their crimes.
Where their crimes
were not too extreme, these people were granted amnesty by
the TRC and their
victims and their families granted some compensation. Where
their atrocities
were too much to forgive, or where they denied committing
crimes in the face of
evidence, their cases were passed on to the judicial system
and they were tried
and if found guilty, convicted. Through the TRC process,
Mandela was able to
help South Africa come to terms with its violent past and
learn to live
together as a rainbow nation. While the TRC has been
criticized on many fronts,
it was a lesser of two evils: the greater evil being
allowing a regime of
retributions and vendettas to grip South Africa and lead to
untold consequences
for the newly freed nation.
But while the TRC was certainly one of
Mandela’s greatest
achievements, his abiding legacy for most Africans is the
fact that he stepped
down from power after serving only one five-year term as
president of South
Africa. In a continent with a long and ugly tradition of
sit-tight dictators
who cling on to power for as long as they are alive,
Mandela’s act represented
an example that will yet be South Africa’s ultimate saving
grace. Once he set
that precedent, no South African president will ever be able
to cling on to
power beyond their mandated terms. Having given all his
adult life to the
struggle for justice in South Africa, Mandela could have
continued winning
elections for as long as he wanted; but he was an honorable
giant who would not
stoop that low and who had the honor, the integrity and the
foresight to know
that stepping down after only one term was perhaps the best
service he could
render his people. And they are no doubt grateful for that
honorable gesture. And
so are all of us who hanker after leaders of Mandela’s
stature in Sub-Saharan
Africa. May his beautiful soul rest in perfect
peace.
Author’s Note: I
just thought it necessary to say that this
short essay represents a very thin skeleton of Mandela’s
innumerable achievements
over a long a fruitful life as freedom fighter, leader and
international
diplomat, among other things.
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