Yesterday’s news was Nelson Mandela’s passing from his body into the realm beyond this our bio-physical platform, as I call it at times. Mandela dug up great treasure for all of humankind as he worked and slaved away in that chalk quarry on Robben Island. As an aside, robben is the Dutch word for seals.
What the regime of the time - Apartheid - meant as punishment, Nelson converted into a new way forward for the two kinds of people that were held apart by this ‘apart-ness’ policy. And in so doing, escape the infernos of revenge and retribution that loomed on the horizon. He tried both the peaceful and the violent before he was condemned for the latter and sentenced for those twenty seven years of digging, which he used so well.
That quarry became his cauldron or better yet smithy, confining and so forcing him to forge the emotions of resentment and anger into a sword of discernment. It is with this power tool that he recast the raw emotions of hurt and pain into a drive that reached beyond to the anchor point of reconciliation.
This did not eliminate all violence, but it prevented the potential calamity of racial revenge, which was recognised by many, but which no one knew how to avoid.
Credit must also go to F.W. DeClerk, who was likewise convinced, but who gets little recognition. DeClerk represented the white segregationist government of the time. I think he gets little credit from the Western press, because it does not fit their perceptions. Namely, that the whites too in our world have an obligation to seek out that compromise. It is not just the coloured human beings who must produce this kind of saviour from our primitive emotions, whites too have to re-examine their treasured assumptions, give up advantages and honour differing values.
Canada prides itself in having supported Mandela’s cause, but this was self serving in part. We have a strong mining industry in this country, as does South Africa, so there was benefit for Canada to support the boycott. England was against, because its companies were heavily invested in the gold and mineral industries. Canada’s gold mining industry is now the largest and present the world over.
Mandela: Gadaffi supported us when no one else would.
A second observation is that Mandela visited Libya’s late Cornell Gadaffi before anyone else! In early 1990-ties this choice raised many eyebrows. Nelson’s answer when asked was: “Gadaffi supported us when no one else would.” Gadaffi would, because his overall cause was ‘Africa for the Africans’, as Libya’s support for the AU-peace force shows, among other such measures
So, Nelson Mandela knew what side his bread was buttered on, playing the balances of vested interest and power to his advantage. No doubt his education as lawyer helped him formulate a compromise that rested on such a balance of interests and powers for his own country.
All together it is an example much worthy of keeping in mind and serves counter example to those choosing the easier paths of retribution, vengeance and the ‘teaching of lessons’, that is chosen so often.
<8:33am.