Cape Times

Tribute to ‘a true patriot’ who sacrified so much for SA

- Brand SA

FOLLOWING her death aged 81 in a Johannesbu­rg hospital on Easter Monday, Brand South Africa highlights the important role that heroine of freedom Winnie Madikizela-Mandela played in helping South Africa transition peacefully from apartheid to a stable democracy in 1994.

Madikizela-Mandela’s courage to speak her truth and dedicate her life towards fulfilling a vision of an equitable, prosperous, better future for South Africa is what made her a truly powerful icon of freedom.

A true patriot, Madikizela­Mandela faced untold hardships during the apartheid years, yet she confronted each with an inner strength and fortitude.

It is her courage and fearless commitment to fulfilling the dream of economic and political freedom which will remain her ultimate legacy.

“Her spirit, her passion… her courage, her willfulnes­s: I felt all of these things the moment I saw her,” said Nelson Mandela of the woman he would marry.

Her dedication to the resistance movement meant she had to push many of her personal goals aside. The first black profession­al social worker in South Africa, Madikizela-Mandela had been married to Mandela for just a few years when he was sentenced to life in prison in 1962. Like many black women of her generation, she was forced to become a single mother to two small daughters and was thrust into the limelight as a “political widow”.

“We were hardly a year together when history deprived me of you,” she wrote in a letter to Mandela while he was in prison in 1970, published in her autobiogra­phy 491 Days, Prisoner Number 1323/69.

Madikizela-Mandela took up the challenge of continuing to resist the racism and sexism that defined her generation with a maturity beyond her years. It was thanks largely to her that internatio­nal attention remained focused on the story of Nelson Mandela and the fight against apartheid while he served out his prison sentence.

“Your formidable shadow which eclipsed me left me naked and exposed to the bitter world of a young ‘political widow’.

“I knew this was a crown of thorns for me but I also knew I said ‘I do’ for better or worse. In marrying you I was marrying the struggle of my people,” she wrote to Mandela in 1977, in a letter also published in her autobiogra­phy.

It was when she was arrested by the apartheid police and taken away from her two daughters, then aged just 9 and 10 years old, that she was forced to bear the true weight of personal sacrifice for her people.

She spent 491 days in detention, much in solitary confinemen­t under brutal conditions. Two trials later, she was finally released.

“She refused to be bowed by the imprisonme­nt of her husband, the perpetual harassment of her family by security forces, detentions, bannings and banishment.

“Her courageous defiance was deeply inspiratio­nal to me, and to generation­s of activists,” noted Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nobel laureate after her death.

Former deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke, once part of the legal team who defended Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, said she had an “incredible ability to be able to take on injustice and soak up pain in a way that is not immediatel­y describabl­e.”

Madikizela-Mandela traded what could have been a simple life of motherhood and marriage for an active political life. Instead, she became fondly known as the “Mother of the Nation”, serving as a mentor and mother to many of South Africa’s young activists, including Fikile Mbalula, current chair of the ANC’s subcommitt­ee on elections, and Malusi Gigaba, now Minister of Home Affairs, both of whom who lived with Madikizela-Mandela as young members of the party’s Youth League.

“Mam’ Winnie lost her innocence because of a struggle she didn’t choose, the struggle entrusted upon her by the husband she chose and the people she identified with – the vulnerable who were discrimina­ted against because of apartheid,” said Sello Hatang, executive officer of the Nelson Mandela Foundation, in tribute to her.

Actress Terry Pheto, who played Madikizela-Mandela in the BET drama Madiba, said she grew up looking up to Winnie, because her mother did as well. “I was very aware of her journey, her struggles and her fights. Because of that, it was important for me to see this role as I’ve always seen her; an important and necessary figure in our time,” Pheto said in an interview in 2017 with HuffPost.

Although separated for 27 years while Mandela was in prison, the couple communicat­ed through a series of emotion-filled hand-written letters.

In one, also published in 491 Days, she wrote: “As you say, our goal is a free Africa, my love I have never had any doubts about that.”

It was this vision that inspired the couple to dedicate their lives to fulfilling their dream of a free South Africa.

Madikizela-Mandela came to represent the hopes and dreams of millions of oppressed South Africans.

“Let us draw inspiratio­n from the struggles that she fought and the dream of a better society to which she dedicated her life,” said President Cyril Ramaphosa in tribute to Madikizela-Mandela.

As South Africa mourns the loss of a brave, courageous leader, we also celebrate her sacrifices and achievemen­ts over a lifetime of dedicated service to, and making the dream of, a free and prosperous South Africa a reality.

Brand South Africa’s executive officer Dr Kingsley Makhubela, who lived with Madikizela-Mandela after her husband Nelson Mandela’s release from prison, expressed his sadness saying: “It is truly great sadness to have lost the Mother of the Nation.

“We are forever grateful for the role she played in securing our freedom. We indeed need to celebrate her legacy.”

Hamba kahle, Mama!

 ??  ?? WINNIE MADIKIZELA­MANDELA
WINNIE MADIKIZELA­MANDELA

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