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Tribute to Mandela

Sun, 8 Dec 2013 Source: Ali, Chibaro

I thought the tears in my eyes have dried. I thought the rain of pebbles

will never fall again. I thought death has granted some respite to the wise

man on whose words and actions the generations walk with. I thought death

has pull back its icy hands from him until at least after our centenary

birthday. But I woke up at dawn and realised my eyes were oozing with

tears, my pillow soaked in tears, not tears of joy but tears of sorrow.

Nightmare again? No. My wife whispered into my ears "the hero and the

greatest African leader has fallen".

From birth, you were given the name Rolihlahla, a Xhosa term loosely

translated as 'pulling the branch of a tree' or euphemism for a

"troublemaker". You joined the ANC in 1944 as a young anti-apartheid

revolutionary, which was later declared as a terrorist organisation and was

banned from operation but that never dampened your spirit to wage the

crusade against the apartheid. You were born as a leader and you ended up

as a hero.

'Umkhonto we Sizwe' translated as "Spear of the Nation" was the armed wing

of the African National Congress (ANC) which you co-founded and fought

against the South African government. You were destined to liberate the

people of South Africa (blacks) from the hands of the wicked white man. You

are revered and respected all over the world as one of the few greatest

African leaders who ever lived. You fought a life battle against oppression

and injustice and served ONLY one term as president of South Africa, you

emerged without stealing your country’s money into foreign accounts to

developing the west (as we see today). Africa needs leaders like you to

build the continent and make it a better place to be.

You went through so many challenges; from exile to imprisonment, but you

never succumbed even at the glare of the gun. You were prepared to

sacrifice your life to liberate the 'black man' from the hands of the

oppressors. As a renowned lawyer, you were banned from active practice and

treated like a lost orphan in the wilderness, you were repeatedly arrested

on force charges, tortured and imprisoned but again that never quenched

your burning spirit to fight for freedom. You were banned from public

appearances, from belonging to any organisation and attending meeting and

delivering speeches but as a smart thinker you always had your way out. You

walked in incognito and barefooted, organising secret meetings and

awakening the spirit of the youth to stand up for their rights. You were a

true patriotic and incorruptible African leader.

You saved the future of South Africans from impending doom when the 'Bantu

Education' was introduced by the whites to give inferior education to the

'blacks'. You quickly came out with the "m plan" and used every household

as an educational center and taught Africans the right education. You made

the whole world to understand that Africans are not inferior before the

Europeans and that we (African) must resist their supremacy and racial

discrimination.

In the rivonia trial, you were sentenced to life imprisonment. On the day

of the trial, crowd gathered outside the courtroom with banners which read:

" you will not serve these sentences as long as we live" and truly you were

release from prison after serving 27 years. You were your people and your

people were you.

Father of the nation, Black pimpernel, as you were affectionately called,

you have left a huge vacuum that will be difficult to replace by any of our

current leaders. Our eyes are moving around the continent searching for

that leader who is nearest in meaning to your calibre. But until we spot

that person, we shall continue to wail in sorrow. Like great writers, great

leaders are not buried in tombs, they are buried in libraries. We shall

visit there and read your legacies. Rest in peace, father of Africa.

Written by Chibaro Ali. chibaronet@gmail.com

https://m.facebook.com/chibaro.ali

Columnist: Ali, Chibaro