Last Wishes



Nelson Mandela is another heroic figure whose estate is the subject of controversy with his former wife Winnie issuing bloodcurdling predictions of what might happen if she doesn't get her way.

Now Nelson Mandela divorced Winnie a very long time ago and I imagine that, as in other countries, issues to do with joint or matrimonial property (such as a family home) were dealt with properly at that time.

Nelson Mandela's last wishes also appear to be perfectly in as much as Mandela's will left the family home in Qunu to his wife Graça Michel, but for whatever reason Winnie seems happy to contest the position now that Nelson is no longer alive and able to speak for himself.

Mandela’s heirs in fight over property

Former South African president Nelson Mandela's house is seen as he celebrates his birthday with family and friends in Qunu, eastern cape, July 18, 2012. 

South Africans celebrated Nelson Mandela's 94th birthday on Wednesday with giant cakes, mass renditions of "Happy Birthday" and 67 minutes of good deeds - one for each year of the anti-apartheid leader's struggle against white-minority rule. 

REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA - Tags: ANNIVERSARY POLITICS) 

By Ruth Maclean - The Times

Bloodshed and chaos will engulf the Mandela clan if a family meeting goes ahead on Friday, according to Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, the former wife of Nelson Mandela.

Mandla Mandela, a grandson of the anti-apartheid hero who died a year ago, has called a family meeting at Qunu, the Mandela ancestral home that Mr Mandela left to his widow, Graça Machel, and her children in perpetuity. Ironically, he wrote in his will that the property should “preserve the unity of the Mandela family” — which is notorious in South Africa for its feuds.

One of the key battles is over which wife is the rightful owner of Qunu. Mrs Madikizela-Mandela, who was left out of the will, has argued that the property was not her ex-husband’s to give away, saying that the house at Qunu had always been hers. In court papers contesting the will she has also claimed that the couple’s divorce was fraudulently obtained and her lawyer has argued that Mr Mandela had a “legal duty” to provide a house for each of his wives, divorced or not.

Last month, in her first interview since Mr Mandela’s death, Mrs Madikizela-Mandela said that she “attained it when the old man was on Robben Island” but that she “never dreamt in a million years” that he would give her property away.

Mandla Mandela has called the meeting to discuss the ownership of Qunu, where his grandfather is buried, as well as other family issues, including who should be the head of the family.

He faces challenges for the leadership, including one from Ndaba, his half-brother. Both are grandsons from Mandela’s first marriage to Evelyn Wase. In 2011 Mandla Mandela had the bodies of his grandfather’s children exhumed from Qunu and moved to his home at Mvezo. He was later forced to return them.

Mrs Madikizela-Mandela’s lawyers will be in court today and tomorrow to try to block Mandla Mandela from entering the property and publicly discussing Mandela family matters.

However, Mrs Madikizela-Mandela warned that if the thousands of people who she said had been invited to the meeting attended, violence could erupt.

“More harm will be caused if the meeting is allowed to proceed,” she said. “The name of Mandela is being dragged through the mud.”

Family Bereavements (6 July 2013)

A bereavement tends to bring out the best and worst in people - and all the more so when a family member is involved.

The sight of Nelson's Mandela family fighting over his legacy is a case in point - predictable and depressing in equal measure - as key figures seek to exploit their personal connection with the Father of the Nation, even before he has drawn his last breath.

For quite a while Mandla Mandela, the former President's grandson and official heir, was my 'chief villain' - as he exhumed the bodies of other relatives and spirited them off to a new site where he has opened a Nelson Mandela visitor centre.

From which Mandla Mandela stands to benefit from personally of course - especially if the new centre were to become a big tourist attraction down the road a bit.

What better tourist magnet could there be but the bones of a great African hero - one of the most important political figures of the last century - perhaps paraded like the body parts of a long dead Catholic saint. 

But thankfully the South African courts have now scuppered that plan by ordering the bodies of Thembi, Makgatho and Makaziwe Mandela to be returned to Qunu - where Nelson Mandela's has repeatedly said that he wants to be laid to rest, in his ancient ancestral home.

Not to be outdone though is Winnie Mandela - who seems to pop up everywhere these days professing her undying love for her former husband and pushing herself into the spotlight at every opportunity.

Now this is odd indeed because in his memoir 'A Long Walk to Freedom' - which Nelson Mandela began to write while incarcerated on Robben Island - the anti-apartheid leader describes his four years with Winnie on his release from prison as the loneliest years of his life.

Presumably this is why Nelson Mandela divorced Winnie back in 1996 and built a new life for himself in which she had no formal role - although she was obviously still the mother of his children.

Yet Winnie has re-written history and reinvented herself with a new status of 'devoted and loving former wife' - in a shameless boost to her profile as the extended Mandela family plan their next moves, few of which seem to involve Nelson Mandela's best interests.

One of the few people to emerge out of this affair with any credit is American President Barack Obama - who refused to exploit the situation by visiting Nelson Mandela in hospital where he is clearly being kept alive rather than allowed to die peacefully. 

If only other members of the family had behaved with such dignity and restraint.

Betraying Mandela (5 January 2014)


Here's an intriguing, if sad, insight into the life of Nelson Mandela on his release from prison and on his way to becoming President of a new South Africa - free from the scourge of apartheid.

I've read Nelson Mandela's autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, but I think I'll buy John Carlin's book because this extract published in the Sunday Times has certainly whetted my appetite - here is a man who literally gave his life for a cause and to his people.

Here are The Specials celebrating Nelson Mandela and his long fight for freedom.

    
Betraying Mandela

As the ailing Nelson Mandela is cared for at home, John Carlin reveals why he has never forgiven the former wife who has visited his bedside


By John Carlin

Mandela with Winnie as he leaves prison after 27 years (Ulli Michel )

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 Beverly Hills to Soweto’s other residents.

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 9.30am 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 lurked 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 in a satin African robe. But 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 Stompie 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 fact that she had not been whisked 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 tranquillity where he sought refuge from the loneliness of prison life.

His letters to her from Robben Island revealed a 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 what 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 exposé 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 Cachalia, 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 dysfunction.

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.

Mandela and Winnie had spent only a brief time together before he was sent to Robben Island (CAMERA PRESS)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 knew 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 does 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.”

Extracted from Knowing Mandela by John Carlin, to be published on Thursday by Atlantic Books at £14.99. Copies can be ordered for £11.99, including postage, fromThe Sunday Times Bookshop on 0845 271 2135

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