Tag: Winnie

  • Winnie… A life of struggles, love and politics

    For Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the first wife of former South African President, the late Nelson Mandela, the struggle has ended. She died yesterday. OLUKOREDE YISHAU examines her struggles, her politics and her relationship.

    IN October last year, she had a minor surgery and came out in ‘high spirits’. In January, Winnie Madikizela Mandela lost her appeal in her quest to get access to the late ex-South African President Nelson Mandela’s Qunu homestead. Yesterday she gave up the privilege to live. She was 81.

    Hers was a life of struggle. She was not the first woman Mandela married. And they only lived together for five of their 38 years of marriage. But, of the women in the ex-president’s life,  the late Winnie towered above all.

    Their relationship was a love story, which some believe was tragically tempered by politics. It was a love story almost like no other. A love tale classical in nature, yet down-to-heart. The late Nelson Mandela’s relationship with Winnie Madikizela was an affair of two larger-than-life protagonists.

    The late Winnie endured a lot because she was his wife: the years of imprisonment, solitary confinement and house arrests. But, no matter his loyalty to her, the late Winnie and his family always came second to his other great love: the ANC (African National Congress) and by extension, the liberation struggle, a fact Winnie saw as an act of betrayal.

    Their love story gave room for love letters laced with poetry, music, imageries and drama. For the 27 years he spent in prison, Mandela wrote Winnie several letters from Robben Island.

    In one of such letters written on April 15, 1976, Mandela said: “My dearest Winnie, Your beautiful photo still stands about two feet above my left shoulder as I write this note. I dust it carefully every morning, for to do so gives me the pleasant feeling that I’m caressing you as in the old days. I even touch your nose with mine to recapture the electric current that used to flush through my blood whenever I did so. Nolitha stands on the table directly opposite me. How can my spirit ever be down when I enjoy the fond attentions of such wonderful ladies?”

    The one he wrote on October 26, 1976 was about Winnie’s detention. It drilled of sadness. In it, he said: “I am struggling to suppress my emotions as I write this letter. I have received only one letter since you were detained, that was dated August 22. I do not know anything about family affairs, such as payment of rent, telephone bills, care of children and their expenses, whether you will get a job when released. As long as I don’t hear from you, I will remain worried and dry like a desert.

    “ I recall the Karoo I crossed on several occasions. I saw the desert again in Botswana on my way to and from Africa—endless pits of sand and not a drop of water. I have not had a letter from you. I feel dry like a desert.

    “ Letters from you and the family are like the arrival of summer rains and spring that livens my life and make it enjoyable.

    “ Whenever I write you, I feel that inside physical warmth, that makes me forget all my problems. I become full of love.”

    Then on June 26, 1977, he wrote of their daughters, their unfulfilled dream of having a baby boy and all that. “We couldn’t fulfill our wishes, as we had planned, to have a baby boy. I had hoped to build you a refuge, no matter how small, so that we would have a place for rest and sustenance before the arrival of the sad, dry days. I fell down and couldn’t do these things. I am as one building castles in the air,” he said.

    His letter of November 22, 1979 was poetic-prose at its best. It was about her visit five days earlier. He described what she looked like and how he “felt like singing, even if just to say Hallelujah!”

    But, time and political tides blew their love away. And on April 13, 1992, at a press conference in Johannesburg, flanked by his two oldest friends and comrades, Walter and Oliver, the late Mandela announced his separation from Winnie. He said the situation had grown so difficult that he felt that it was in the best interests of all concerned – the ANC, the family, and Winnie – that they part. He said though he discussed the matter with the ANC, the separation itself was made for personal reasons.

    His statement at the news conference reads:”The relationship between myself and my wife, Comrade Nomzamo Winnie Mandela, has become the subject of much media speculation. I am issuing this statement to clarify the position and in the hope that it will bring an end to further conjecture.

    “Comrade Nomzamo and myself contracted our marriage at a critical time in the struggle for liberation in our country. Owing to the pressures of our shared commitment to the ANC and the struggle to end apartheid, we were unable to enjoy a normal family life. Despite these pressures, our love for each other and our devotion to our marriage grew and intensified….

    “During the two decades I spent on Robben Island, she was an indispensable pillar of support and comfort to myself personally…. Comrade Nomzamo accepted the onerous burden of raising our children on her own … She endured the persecutions heaped upon her by the government with exemplary fortitude and never wavered from her commitment to the freedom struggle. Her tenacity reinforced my personal respect, love and growing affection. It also attracted the admiration of the world at large. My love for her remains undiminished.

    “However, in view of the tensions that have arisen owing to differences between ourselves on a number of issues in recent months, we have mutually agreed that a separation would be best for each of us. My action was not prompted by the current allegations being made against her in the media…. Comrade Nomzamo has and can continue to rely on my unstinting support during these trying moments in her life.

    “I shall personally never regret the life Comrade Nomzamo and I tried to share together. Circumstances beyond our control however dictated it should be otherwise. I part from my wife with no recriminations. I embrace her with all the love and affection I have nursed for her inside and outside prison from the moment I first met her. Ladies and gentlemen, I hope you will appreciate the pain I have gone through.

    “Perhaps I was blinded to certain things because of the pain I felt for not being able to fulfill my role as a husband to my wife and a father to my children. But just as I am convinced that my wife’s life while I was in prison was more difficult than mine, my own return was also more difficult for her than it was for me. She married a man who soon left her; that man became a myth; and then that myth returned home and proved to be just a man after all.

    “As I later said at my daughter Zindzi’s wedding, it seems to be the destiny of freedom fighters to have unstable personal lives. When your life is the struggle, as mine was, there is little room left for family. That has always been my greatest regret, and the most painful aspect of the choice I made.

    “We watched our children growing without our guidance,’ I said at the wedding, ‘ and when we did come out (of prison), my children said, ‘We thought we had a father and one day he’d come back. But to our dismay, our father came back and he left us alone because he has now become the father of the nation.’” To be the father of a nation is a great honour, but to be the father of a family is a greater joy. But it was a joy I had far too little of.”

    The separation of April 1992 became a divorce in March 1996, having spent only five of their 38 married years together. And Winnie became history in his life. Now, she is history to South Africa, which she loved.

    Winnie, who felt betrayed by the Madiba, once said: “This name Mandela is an albatross around the necks of my family. You all must realise that Mandela was not the only man who suffered. There were many others, hundreds who languished in prison and died. Many unsung and unknown heroes of the struggle, and there were others in the leadership too, like poor Steve Biko, who died of the beatings, horribly all alone. Mandela did go to prison and he went in there as a burning young revolutionary. But look what came out.

    “Mandela let us down. He agreed to a bad deal for the blacks. Economically, we are still on the outside. The economy is very much ‘white’. It has a few token blacks, but so many who gave their life in the struggle have died unrewarded.

    “I cannot forgive him for going to receive the Nobel (Peace Prize in 1993) with his jailer (FW) de Klerk. Hand in hand they went. Do you think de Klerk released him from the goodness of his heart? He had to. The times dictated it, the world had changed, and our struggle was not a flash in the pan, it was bloody to say the least and we had given rivers of blood. I had kept it alive with every means at my disposal.

    “Look at this Truth and Reconciliation charade. He should never have agreed to it. What good does the truth do? How does it help anyone to know where and how their loved ones were killed or buried? That Bishop Desmond Tutu who turned it all into a religious circus came here.

    “He had the cheek to tell me to appear. I told him a few home truths. I told him that he and his other like-minded cretins were only sitting here because of our struggle and me. Because of the things I and people like me had done to get freedom.

    “Look at what they make him do. The great Mandela. He has no control or say any more. They put that huge statue of him right in the middle of the most affluent ‘white’ area of Johannesburg. Not here where we spilled our blood and where it all started. Mandela is now a corporate foundation. He is wheeled out globally to collect the money and he is content doing that. The ANC has effectively sidelined him but they keep him as a figurehead for the sake of appearance.”

    She certainly will be remembered for different reasons. For victims of the violence she allegedly supervised during the Apartheid struggles, she would remain a villain. For beneficiaries of her struggles, she will be a heroine. Different strokes for different folks.

  • Buhari mourns Winnie Mandela, says Africa has lost courageous woman

    President Muhammadu Buhari has described the passing away of South-Africa’s anti-apartheid icon, Mrs Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, as a huge loss to Africa of a courageous woman.

    The President, in a condolence message in Abuja on Monday, noted that the deceased was a woman of uncommon determination, steadfastness and perseverance.

    President Buhari’s condolence message is contained in a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu.

    According to the President, the late Winnnie held aloft the torch of the struggle against institutionalised discrimination even while her ex-husband, the late Madiba, President Nelson Mandela was incarcerated.

    President Buhari, on behalf of the government and people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, commiserated with the family of the deceased, the government and people of South Africa.

    He urged them to be consoled by the knowledge that the late Winnie Mandela’s contributions to ending apartheid will not be forgotten.

    According to him, she remained a pride not only to the African woman, but indeed all Africans.

    The President prayed that God Almighty would comfort all those who mourned the departed and grant her soul eternal rest.(NAN)

  • Why Nelson Mandela never forgave ex-wife,  Winnie

    Why Nelson Mandela never forgave ex-wife, Winnie

    Nelson Mandela passed away Thursday night. John Carlin in his new book ‘Knowing Mandela,’ reveals why he never forgave the former wife who has visited his bedside.

    TWO weeks before Nelson Mandela’s release from prison in February 1990 I went to see his wife, Winnie, at her home in Diepkloof Extension, the posh neighbourhood of Soweto where the handful of black people who had contrived to make a little money resided. It was known as Baverly Hills to Soweto’s other presidents.

    Winnie’s home, funded by foreign benefactors, was a two-floor, three-bedroom house with a garden and a small swimming pool. The height of extravagance by black standards, it would have more or less met the aspirations of the average white, middle-class South African.

    Zindzi, Winnie’s slim and attractive second daughter, was 29 but looked younger in a yellow T-shirt and denim dungarees. It was 9.30 a.m. and she was in the kitchen frying eggs. She invited me in and started chatting as if we were old friends. The truth was that I had not scheduled an interview with Winnie. I had just dropped in to try my luck. But Zindzi saw nothing wrong in me giving it a shot.

    Mum, she said, was still upstairs and would probably be a while. As I hovered about waiting (and, as it turned out, waiting, and waiting friends of Zindzi wandered in for coffee and a chat. Completing the South African middle-class picture, a small, wizened maid in blue overalls padded inscrutably around.

    Finally, Winnie made her entrance, Taller than I had expected, very much the grande dame, she displayed neither surprise nor irritation at my presence in her home. When I said I would like to interview her, she responded with a sigh, a knowing smile and a glance at her watch. I said all I would need was half an hour. She thought a moment, shrugged her shoulders and said: “OK. But you will have to give me a little time.” She still had to put the finishing touches to her morning toilette.

    The picture presented to me by mother, daughter, friends and cleaning lady was of a domesticity so stable and relaxed that, had I not been better informed, I would never have imagined the depths of trauma that lucked beneath.

    Winnie had been continually persecuted by agents of the apartheid state during the 1970s and 1980s; she had borne the anguish of hearing her two small daughters screaming as the police broke into her home and carted her off to jail; she had spent more than a year in solitary confinement. Trusting that her confused and stricken children would be cared for by friends; she had been banished and placed under house arrest far away. But she was back, her circumstances altered dramatically for the better now that Mandela’s release was imminent.

    One hour after her first entrance, she majestically reappeared, Cleopatra still needed her morning coffee, and motioned me to wait in her study while she withdrew into the kitchen. I had five minutes to take in the surroundings.

    On a bookshelf there was a row of framed family portraits, a Christmas card and a birthday card. Only a month had passed since Christmas, but nearly four since Winnie had turned 53. I could not resist taking a closer look.

    I opened the Christmas card, which was enormous, and immediately recognised Nelson Mandela’s large, spidery handwriting. “Darling, I love you. Madiba,” It said. Madiba was the tribal name by which he liked to be known to those close to him. On the birthday card he had written the same words.

    If I had not known better I might have imagined the cards had been sent by an infatuated teenager. Once we began our interview. Winnie took on just such a role, playing the tremulous bride-to-be, convincing me she was in a state of nervous excitement at the prospect of rekindling her life’s great love.

    Close up she had, like her husband, the charisma of the vastly self-confident, and there was a coquettish, eye-fluttering sensuality about her. It was not hard to imagine how the young woman who met Mandela one rainy evening in 1957 had struck him, as he would later confess, like a thunderbolt.

    The Mandela the world saw wore a mask that disguised his private feelings, presenting himself as a fearless hero, immune to ordinary human weakness. His effectiveness as a leader hung, he believed, on keeping that public mask from cracking. Winnie offered the greatest test to his resolve. During the following years the mask cracked only twice. She was the cause both times.

    The first was in May 1991. She had just been convicted at Johannesburg’s Rand Supreme Court of assault and accessory to kidnapping a 14-year-old black boy called Stomple Moeketsi, whom her driver had subsequently murdered. Winnie had been led to believe, falsely as it turned out, that the boy had been working as a spy for the apartheid state.

    Winnie and Mandela walked together down the steps of the grand court building. Once again the actress, she swaggered to the street, right fist raised in triumph. It was not clear what she could possibly have been celebrating, except perhaps the perplexing straight off to jail and would remain free pending an appeal.

    Mandela had a different grasp of the situation. His face was grey, his eyes were downcast.

    The second and last time was nearly a year later. The setting was an evening press conference hastily summoned at the drab headquarters of the ANC. He shuffled into the room, sat down at a table and read from a piece of paper, beginning by paying tribute to his wife.

    “During the two decades I spent on Robben Island she was an indispensable pillar of support and comfort… My love for her remains undiminished.” There was a general intake of breath. Then he continued: “We have mutually agreed that a separation would be the best for each of us… I part from my wife with no recriminations. I embrace her with all the love and affection I have nursed for her inside and outside prison from the moment I first met her.”

    He rose to his feet. “Ladies and gentlemen. I hope you ‘ll appreciate the pain I have gone through and I now end this interview.”

    He exited the room, head-bowed, amid total silence.

    Mandela’s love for Winnie had been, like many great loves, a kind of madness, all the more so in his case as it was founded more on a fantasy that he had kept alive for 27 years in prison than on the brief time they had actually spent together. The demands of his political life before he was imprisoned were such that they had next to no experience of married life, as Winnie herself would confess to me that morning.

    “I have never lived with Mandela,” she said. “I have never known what it was to have a close family where you sat around the table with husband and children. I have no such dear memories. When I gave birth to my children he was never there, even though he was not in jail at the time.”

    It seemed that Winnie, who was 22 to his 38 when they met, had cast a spell on him. Or maybe he cast a spell on himself, needing to reconstruct those fleeting memories of her into a fantasy of tranquility where he sought refuge from the loneliness of prison life.

    His letters to her from Robben Island revealed romantic, sensual side to his nature that no one but Winnie then knew. He recalled “the electric current” that “flushed” through his blood as he looked at her photograph and imagined their caresses.

    The truth was that Winnie had had several lovers during Mandela’s long absence. In the months before his release, she had been having an affair with Dali Mpofu, a lawyer 30 years her junior and a member of her defence team. She carried on with the affair after Mandela left prison. ANC members close to Mandela knew that was going on, as they did about her frequent bouts of drunkenness. I tried asking them why they did not talk to Mandela about her waywardness, but I was always met by frosty stares. Winnie became a taboo subject within the ANC during the two years after Mandela left prison. Confronting him with the truth was a step too far for the freedom fighters of the ANC.

    His impeccably courteous public persona acted as a coat of armour protecting the sorrowing man within. But there came a point when Mandela could deceive himself, or the public, no longer. Details of the affair with Mpofu were made luridly public in a newspaper report two weeks before the separation announcement.

    The article was a devastating, irrefutable expose of Winnie’s affair. It was based on a letter she had written to Mpofu that revealed he had recently had a child with a woman whom she referred to as “a white hag.” Winnie accused Mpofu of “running around f***** at the slightest emotional excuse … Before I am through with you, you are going to learn a bit of honesty and sincerity and know what betrayal of one’s love means to a woman … Remember always how much you have hurt and humiliated me … I keep telling you the situation is deteriorating at home, you are not bothered because you are satisfying yourself every night with a woman. I won’t be your bloody fool, Dali.”

    In private, Mandela had already endured quite enough conjugal torture. I learnt of one especially hurtful episode from a friend of Mandela some years later. Not long after the end of her trial, Winnie was due to fly to America on ANC-related business. She wanted to take Mpofu with her, and Mandela said she should not, Winnie agreed not to, but went with him anyway. Mandela phoned her at her hotel room in New York, and Mpofu answered the phone.

    On the face of it, Mandela was a man more sinned against than sinning, but he did not see it that way. It was his belief that the original sin was to have put his political cause before his family.

    Despite everything, Mandela believed when he left prison that he would find a way to reconcile political and family life. Some years after his separation from Winnie, I interviewed his close friend Amina Cashalia, who had known him since before he met Winnie.” His one great wish,” she told me, “was that he would come out of prison, and have a family life again with his wife and the children. Because he’s a great family man and I think he really wanted that more than anything else and he couldn’t have it.”

    His fallout with Winnie only deepened the catastrophe, contaminating his relationships with other family members, among them his daughter Zindzi. She was a far more complicated character than I had imagined when I chatted with her cheerfully in her mother’s kitchen over fried eggs. At that very moment, in late January 1990, her current lover, the father of her third child, was in a prison cell. Five days later he hanged himself.

    Zindzi was very much her mother’s daughter, inheriting her capacity to dissemble as well as her strength of personality. The unhappiness and sheer chaos that she would endure in her own private life, a mirror of her mother’s, found expression in a succession of tense episodes with her father after he was set free.

    One of them took place before friends and family on the day of her marriage to the father of her fourth child, six months after her parents’ separation. It was a glittering occasion at Johannesburg’s swankiest hotel, with Zindzi radiant in a magnificent pearl and sequin bridal dress. It seemed to be a joyous celebration; in truth, it provided further evidence of the Mandela family’s dysfunctions.

    One of the guests seated near the top table was Helen Suzman, the white liberal politician and good friend of Mandela. She told me that he went through the ceremonial motions with all the propriety one would have expected. He joined in the cutting of the wedding cake and played his part when the time came to give his speech, declaring, “She’s not mine now,” as fathers are supposed to do. He did not, however, mention Winnie in the speech. When he sat down, he looked silent and cheerless.

    Maybe he had had time to reflect in the intervening six months on the depth of Winnie’s betrayal. For more details had emerged of her love affairs and of the crimes of the gang of young men “Winnie’s boys,” as they were known in Soweto – who played the role of both bodyguards and courtly retinue. They had killed at least three young black men, beaten up Winnie’s perceived enemies and raped ;young girls.

    Whether Mandela chose to realise it at the time, he was the reason that Winnie never ended up going to jail. Some years later, the minister of justice and the chief of national intelligence admitted to me that they had conveyed a message to the relevant members of the judiciary to show Winnie leniency.

    Mandela’s mental and emotional wellbeing were essential to the success of the negotiations between the government and the ANC; for him to bow out of the process could have had catastrophic consequences for the country as a whole. Jailing Winnie would be too grave a risk.

    Bizarrely, one of the guests at Zindzi’s wedding, prominently positioned near the top table, was the “white hag” Winnie had derided in her letter to Mpofu, and she was sitting next to a man I know to be another former lover of Winnie’s.

    It also would have been difficult for Mandela to miss the menacing glances Winnie cast towards the “hag” although I hope he missed the moment when Winnie brushed past her and hissed at her former lover: “Go on! Take her ! Take her!”

    When the band struck up and the newly married couple got up to dance, Mandela, who had been standing up, turned his back on Winnie and returned stiffly to the top table. Grim-faced for the rest of the night, he treated Winnie as if she did not exist. At one point, Suzman passed him a note. “Smile, Nelson,” it said.

    In October 1994, five months after Mandela had become president, I spoke to a friend of his, one of the few people in whom he confided the details of his marital difficulties. The friend leant over to me and said: “It’s amazing. He has forgiven all his political enemies, but he cannot forgive her.”

    During their divorce proceedings a year and a half later, he made his feelings towards Winnie public at the Rand Supreme Court, where he had accompanied and supported Winnie during her trial in 1991.

    As his lawyer would tell me later, he was arbitrarily generous about sharing his estate, giving Winnie what was more than fair. But he made his feelings bluntly known in the divorce hearing. Standing a few feet away from her, he addressed the judge, saying: “Can I put it simply, my lord? If the entire universe tried to persuade me to reconcile with the defendant. I would not … I am determined to get rid of this marriage.”

    He did not shirk from describing before the court the disappointment and misery of married life after he returned from prison. Winnie, he explained, did not share his bed once in the two years after their reunion. “I was the loneliest man,” he said.

    The Victorian poet Arthur Hugh Clough wrote about the “terrible notions of duty” that boost the public figure but can stunt the private man. It is impossible to avoid concluding that Mandela was far less at ease in private than in public life. In the harsh world of South African politics he had his bearing; in the family sphere he often seemed baffled and lost.

    Happily for his country, one did not drain energy from the other. Thanks to a kind of self-imposed apartheid of the mind, personal anguish and the political drive inhabited separate compartments and ran along parallel lines.

    As out of control as she could be in her personal affairs, she possessed a lucid political intelligence and a mature understanding of where her husband’s priorities lay, even if she was deluded in attributing some of his qualities to herself.

    “When you lead the kind of life we lead, if you are involved in a revolutionary situation, you cease to think in terms of self,” she said. “The question of personal feelings and reactions dues not even arise, because you are in a position where you think solely in terms of the nation, the people who have come first all your life.”

    •Courtesy: Sunday Times

    Extracted from Knowing Mandela by John Carlin

  • My vigil for Nelson, the  man I still  love, by Winnie

    My vigil for Nelson, the man I still love, by Winnie

    At the hospital bedside of ailing Nelson Mandela, the former South African president, two women take turns to hold his hand and speak softly to him.

    His wife Graca, who sleeps at the hospital to be near him, has formed an extraordinary bond with Mandela’s ex-wife, the colourful and often-controversial Winnie.

    They spend hours together talking about ‘our husband’ and their hopes that he will recover. Winnie describes Graca as her younger sister.

    Mandela, 94, the world’s best-loved revolutionary and father of the South African nation, is entering his fourth week in hospital.

    He spent 27 years in prison for his political beliefs, and has suffered chronic lung problems due to contracting tuberculosis while incarcerated on Robben Island.

    In a moving interview, and close to tears, 76-year-old Winnie talked to The Mail on Sunday about the true state of Mandela’s health and how his large extended family is struggling to cope.

    She told of tender moments at his bedside recently when he was struggling to talk.

    She could not hear what he was saying through his oxygen mask. ‘I called a doctor and he listened up close,’ she said.

    ‘He told me my husband wanted me to sit down. He was so weak but he still cares so much, he is still so concerned for others, and of course he is still telling me what to do.’

    Winnie, with a big smile, clearly enjoyed the notion that her ex-husband was the only person likely to try to order her around. Her lifelong reputation has been of a strong-willed, fearlessly outspoken woman.

    Seated next to Zindzi, the younger of her two daughters with Mandela, in the pretty garden of Winnie’s home in Soweto, Johannesburg, she said she was learning to face the reality of Mandela’s plight.

    “Of course I am also reliving our long life together,” she said. “I cannot escape it. We were married for more than 30 years and I still love him. I’m the mother of his children.”

    She said she wanted to reassure people who were sending messages from all over the world that the family was not discussing switching off Mandela’s life-support.

    “We are at the hospital every day. We want to give him moral support. The most painful thing is to see him struggling.

    “He is breathing through an oxygen mask and there are drips for nutrition and sedation.

    “Most of the time he is comfortable and still very much with us. He often opens his eyes and can squeeze my hand.”

    She said she was shocked when she found out about how the ambulance taking Mandela to hospital had broken down but said: ‘At least he is in a safe place now and that is in the past.’

    Winnie explained that in the tradition of the Xhosa – Mandela’s tribe – it was forbidden to speak of an elder’s death in advance, adding: “But realistically in this case we have to.”

    Dressed in black with leopard trim and a gold waistcoat, Winnie dabbed her eyes as she talked. She has a natural charisma and a forceful clarity of speech – a characteristic that the apartheid-era authorities found hard to ignore.

    In 1969, leaving her small daughters behind, she spent 18 months in prison, mostly in solitary confinement, under the Suppression of Terrorism Act.

    Afterwards she was banished hundreds of miles from her home to Brandfort, an Afrikaans stronghold in the Orange Free State where she was harassed constantly by the secret police.

    Then, in 1988, she was accused of the kidnap and murder of a teenage boy after he was killed by her private army of supporters – dubbed Mandela United because they wore football shirts.

    In 1991 she was convicted of being an accessory to murder and sentenced to six years – reduced to a fine on appeal. And in 2003 she was given a six-month suspended sentence for fraud and theft.

    Today she rejects the accusations, and says she ‘doesn’t give a damn’ about them. Winnie is proud of her work in recruiting youths to the ANC revolution and would do it all again.

    “All of the accusations against me were done to tarnish the ANC and the Mandela name,” she said.

    She is clearly no longer hurt, just angry at past sufferings. But that is nothing compared to the reality of her ex-husband’s illness.

    “Words cannot describe our pain and hurt when people talk or write of him as if he had already passed on,” she said.

    “He has actually shown improvement in the past few days. His doctors are amazing and we are very happy with them.

    “There is no intention whatsoever of discussing intervention by the family. What is happening is God’s wish.”

    Zindzi, 53, who joined her parents’ activism against apartheid from the age of 12, said she had a personal touching moment with her father last week.

    “I was holding his hand and stroking his shoulder and telling him interesting things happening in the country. I told him about President Obama’s visit and his eyes opened and he looked happy. Then I told him about our plans for his 95th birthday on July 18.”

    She said when the end came, it would be President Jacob Zuma who would make an announcement.

    “In the meantime I am sitting here in hospital with my dad and he is alive and breathing and well. If people love him so much they should avoid rumours about his death.

    “There is a bizarre excitement about all these rumours on Twitter and other sites. It removes all the humanity around him and it hurts us.”

    Winnie criticised Zuma for recently taking a delegation into Mandela’s home, surrounding him as he sat motionless in an armchair, staring into nothingness, clearly unaware of anything around him.

    A grinning Zuma afterwards said he was happy to see Mandela looking so well. “You see he is up and about and in good spirits,” he said outside the house.

    Winnie described the intrusion as ‘the most insensitive thing anyone could have done’.

    “He was obviously so unwell. Less than a month later he was in hospital. They compromised his dignity and the family’s dignity. It was terrible to see an old man in that state. We are after all human beings with emotions.”

    Zindzi said it was some times overwhelming to cope with her father’s health crisis and she felt afraid about his inevitable death. ‘I know he’s fighting,’ she said. ‘He was born a boxer, and he’s still fighting today.

    “It is so hurtful and insensitive when we hear that people are gathering for his death and funeral, and even worshippers are praying for us to have the strength to let him go.

    “We will not be letting him go – we will be letting God and nature take their course. We are not going to switch off anything or intervene to stop any treatment.

    “This is a 94-year-old man who we love, a father and a husband. He is the one choosing to hang around.”

    She said that ‘both of my mothers’ – Winnie and Graca – were always there and both part of the Mandela extended family, and that it helped them to see crowds outside the Pretoria hospital where Mandela is being treated.

    ‘I was so touched to see a small child giving a policeman a cup of coffee one cold evening,’ she said.

    “That was a small act of compassion and kindness that would have been typical of my father.”

    Zindzi and her mother talked of turbulent times when they turned to Mandela’s humour to get through.

    She remembers his favourite joke about getting to Heaven. ‘He said he would open a branch of the African National Congress there, but first he would take his belongings in paper bags up to the Pearly Gates and ask if Oliver was inside.

    That’s Oliver Tambo, his friend and fellow activist. They would tell him Oliver was busy, so he would ask to see Luthuli, another great father of the ANC. He would also be busy.

    “But then my father would see Adolf Hitler scrubbing the floors. He said, “You’ll know that you’ve gone to Heaven if you are in a place where dictators are humbled.” ’

    Zindzi, who has her father’s famous smile, suffered a difficult childhood without him, and experienced her mother being arrested by the security squads.

    In one 2am raid on their home in Vilakazi Street in Soweto, at the heart of the struggle against the former racist government, Zindzi held on to her mother’s skirt as police dragged her away.

    After that, with her mother imprisoned on trumped-up charges, she was sent to boarding school.

    Aged 12, she wrote to the United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid, demanding better security for her mother.

    And aged 25, Zindzi stood up at a packed football stadium to read her father’s message from prison.

    It was 1985 and he had refused a cruelly manipulated offer to release him if he renounced violent action against the apartheid state.

    Zindzi spoke in a clear declamatory tone as she read his words: “I cherish my own freedom dearly but I care even more for your freedom. Too many have died since I went to prison, too many have suffered . Only free men can negotiate.

    “Prisoners cannot enter into contracts . I cannot and will not give any undertaking at a time when I and you, the people, are not free. Your freedom and mine cannot be separated. I will return.”

    Zindzi had to summon extraordinary reserves of courage to appear like that in public. Her father was in prison and her mother was confined to her home between 6am and 6pm and forbidden to speak out.

    During our interview, Winnie revealed how, that day, she had put on a hat and slippers, wrapped herself in a blanket and mingled with the crowds to proudly hear her daughter read her husband’s brave words.

    Today Zindzi says it was a

    bittersweet moment for her.

    She was desperate to have her father home.

    She was only four months old when he was first arrested, and only four years old when she stood outside a Johannesburg courtroom with her mother while he was sentenced to life imprisonment. She didn’t meet him on Robben Island until she was 15.

    “It was such an important moment, finally seeing the man beyond the myth,” she said. “I finally understood at that moment what charm and humour he had, trying to make me feel better despite the surroundings and the three prison warders.

    “He told me to imagine us all at home, when I once sat on his lap in front of the fire while we had Sunday lunch as a family.

    “I embraced the fact that I really did have a father and he really was here.”

    When Mandela was released in 1990 the family still found it hard to live a normal life. By then Zindzi had three children by three different fathers, but Mandela still believed she should be part of his household and under his control.

    She moved into the family home where Winnie lives today – a two-storey house popularly known as ‘Parliament’ in Orlando West, Soweto. The front room has a huge circular table where intense political debate took place in the years immediately following his release.

    Elsewhere in the house there is the evidence of normal family life: rooms cluttered with family photographs and historical mementoes and paintings

    Winnie lives there with her daughter and son-in-law and their children.

    Zindzi recalls her father, in the aftermath of his release, as a possessive man who loved her young children but who treated her ‘as if I was still in pigtails and bobby socks’.

    He tried to impose a curfew if she went out, and wanted her to have a chaperone.

    When Zindzi’s son Bambatha was five months old, Mandela, a doting grandfather, persuaded her to stop breastfeeding him so that he could have the baby sleep with him and Winnie in their bed.

    Zindzi said: ‘He wanted to make up his bottle and feed him and change him. He wanted a second chance to be a real dad.’

    Bambatha was a confident little two-year-old when he answered his grandfather’s phone one day and found himself talking to George Bush Snr, then President of the United States.

    Bush had recently collapsed on a visit to Japan and Bambatha told him: ‘You must look after yourself better and drink lots of water.’

    An amused Bush later sent him a postcard from the White House thanking him for his concern.

    But, Winnie explained, life for the Mandela family was far from normal. ‘His release had been the greatest moment of my life. I equated it with freedom for everyone.

    “Until then I hadn’t been able to speak out in my own country. Now I was trying to heal myself with a normal husband and father around the dining table.

    “But it wasn’t to be. He was busy morning till night. It was a circus and impossible to have a normal life. We separated in 1991. We were both emotionally brutalised.”

    For Winnie there was an unexpected development. Now she could stand for election to parliament and take up a career of her own.

    She became a passionate campaigner for the poor, heading the ANC Women’s League and amassing a following of millions as she fought for housing and jobs.

    Today she is a member of the powerful National Executive Committee of the ANC, still fighting the cause for her people.

    She said Mandela would be disappointed if he knew of South Africa’s lack of progress in dealing with poverty, and that white people were still in control of most wealth.

    “As president he did what he could,” she said. “He did more than enough. But he was already in his 70s when he became president.”

    Winnie said she feared that South Africa was facing a bleak future with massive unemployment among the youth.

    “This is not what he fought for,” she said. “Our Freedom Charter declares the land belongs to all of us but our land reform programmes have failed and every day now you read of corruption.

    “Mandela had no magic wand, but better policies. In many ways the ANC is splintered today and needs to go back to the drawing board.”

    When her parents sepa

    rated in 1992, Zindzi was

    devastated. She had spent many hours talking to her father about her childhood because he wanted so much to fill in the gaps of his lost prison years.

    During those years she had had many difficulties of her own. ‘I went through a period of anger, bitterness and depression especially at defining moments in my life when I thought my father should have been part of it,’ she said.

    Winnie said Zindzi had been a naughty, difficult child. At the age of six she angrily demanded to know why her father was in prison.

    “I tried to tell her that many daddies were in prison to fight for freedom for all of us. It was hard to explain why a man would be in prison if he wasn’t bad.

    “And Zindzi said I was lying. Her friends next door had their daddy at home, so it wasn’t true that all daddies were in prison.

    “She suffered badly during those prison years, as I did. I was the most unmarried married woman. My husband was away from me for 27 years.

    “But still no one knows me better than him. It is extremely painful to see him now, but I know it is God’s wish.”

    She said the family could not have managed the idea of his death without the world’s sympathy pouring in daily through messages, prayers, letters and the crowds outside the hospital and his home in Johannesburg.

    Zindzi said her father still had no real concept of the impact he made on people. He would be amazed to know of people gathering in their thousands to pray and sing for him.

    “When he was first released from prison I went with him on a tour of America,” she recalled.

    “There was a woman who collapsed weeping in the street and had to be helped to her feet. Daddy and I drove back, very quietly, and had lunch.

    “He said he could not understand why that lady was so emotional – it upset him. He had no idea how people were affected by what he had done in his life.”

     

  • Tutu joins prayers as Mandela battles for life

    Tutu joins prayers as Mandela battles for life

    Ex-wife Winnie visits hospital

    Anti-apartheid campaigner Dr. Desmond Tutu yesterday joined prayers for ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela who is receiving intensive care at a Pretoria hospital. President Jacob Zuma’s office said Mandela’s condition remained unchanged after three nights in the hospital.

    Presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said: “Today, the doctors are saying his condition is unchanged.

    “He is under expert attention and doctors are doing everything to keep him comfortable.”

    Maharaj described a report in The Star suggesting the Mandela family had barred the ANC and government officials from visiting Madiba as unfortunate.

    “There is no substance to that. It’s very unfortunate that one particular newspaper chose to run with that as a headline. I’ve read that report and it has no single source it attributes to, except three unnamed sources.

    “There are restrictions which arise from the fact that Madiba is under intensive care. Those are medical restrictions to control movement of people (to exclude the) possibility of visitors bringing infection into the environment,” said Maharaj.

    The newspaper reported that the Mandela family had taken charge of the 94-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner’s hospital stay, banning everyone, including government leaders and senior party officials, from visiting him.

    The ANC said it was unaware of this.

    Maharaj said President Jacob Zuma was scheduled to visit Mandela in hospital, but did not say when.

    “His (Zuma’s) focus now is to allow the medical team every opportunity to concentrate on their job. To allow the closest relatives to go there and be close to him. President Zuma will visit at the appropriate time. We just want Madiba to get better.”

    ANC MP and Mandela’s ex-wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela has been at the hospital.

    A foundation led by retired archbishop Tutu described the 94-year-old anti-apartheid hero as an “extraordinary gift” to South Africa.

    A statement issued for the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation described Mandela as “the beloved father of our nation” and offered prayers for a man seen by many around the world as a symbol of reconciliation because of his peacemaking role when white racist rule ended in South Africa.

    Mandela “once again endures the ravages of time in hospital,” said the Cape Town-based foundation, which was founded by Tutu and his wife Leah to promote peace. “We offer our thanks to God for the extraordinary gift of Mr. Mandela, and wish his family strength.”

    Tutu, 81, was also a vigorous campaigner against apartheid, which ended when all-race elections were held in 1994 and Mandela became president. Like Mandela, Tutu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts on behalf of his compatriots. Mandela shared his prize with F.W. de Klerk, the last president of the apartheid era.

    “We send our blessings to the doctors and nurses responsible for his care,” Tutu’s foundation said.

    Maharaj said the 48 hours between Saturday and Monday, when there was no update on Mandela’s health, was caused by the lack of progress on the elder statesman’s health.

    “You would not want a repetition of the same thing over and over. I know you want him to get better, but we can’t give you good news if it’s false. We can’t give you bad news when it’s not true.

    Local and international journalists spent the day outside the two entrances to the Pretoria hospital where Mandela was believed to be.

    Security guards had been posted at the entrances.

    More than 10 broadcast vans were there.

    Some journalists had erected small tents and others had generators. Passers-by stopped to ask about Mandela.