Wonderful Women Of The World
Posted by Michelle Moquin on 4th June 2011
Good morning!
I love reading about women who have done, and are doing great things in their lives for others. I search out these women so that I can highlight them, honor and give them the recognition they deserve. Sometimes the women I write about are doing wonderful things that motivate us to do something…to join them in their crusade. And other times, I write about women of the past, who need the support of future generations to carry on their passions when they are no longer able.
Today I write about Albertina Sisulu. Sisulu passed away this last Thursday. She dedicated her life to the ANC (African National Congress), lamented what apartheid did to her family but inspired her children and lived to see them become leaders in a democratic South Africa.
Albertina Sisulu was a trained nurse, a veteran of the anti-apartheid, campaigning for the rights of women and children. She was a leader of the United Democratic Front, a key anti-apartheid coalition in the 1980s that brought together religious, labor and community development groups.
After reading and hearing about her, no doubt she deserves today’s title. My warm wishes and thoughts go out to those that mourn her loss.
South Africa mourns as ANC anti-apartheid icon Albertina Sisulu dies
Albertina Sisulu, one of the last contemporaries of Nelson Mandela, has been hailed as a colossus of the struggle and a mother to South Africa, after her death at 92. Sisulu and her late husband, African National Congress (ANC) leader Walter Sisulu, were key figures in the fight against white-minority rule, enduring decades of persecution by the apartheid regime. In South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994, when Mandela became the country’s first black president, Sisulu won a seat in parliament, capping her lifetime in politics. President Jacob Zuma said Friday that “Mama Sisulu”, as she was affectionately known, had “reared, counselled, nursed and educated most of the leaders and founders of the democratic South Africa”. ”We must thank her most profoundly for the selfless service to all South Africans and humanity at large, for her generosity of spirit and for teaching the nation humility, respect for human dignity and compassion,” Zuma said in a statement. ”Mama Sisulu was one of the foremost mothers of the nation and the last of the colossuses of the struggle for the liberation of South Africa.”
Sisulu’s daughter Lindiwe, the country’s defence minister, arrived at her mother’s house in northern Johannesburg on Friday as a stream of top-ranking government and ANC leaders came to pay their respects. Many rememberd Sisulu as not only a struggle hero but a mother to Mandela’s children and others whose activist fathers were imprisoned or forced into exile. ”She gave me unconditional love, she called me her son, I called her my mom and she was my second mother,” said Dali Tambo, whose father, Oliver, was president of the ANC and spent more than three decades in exile.
Mandela’s family recalled how Sisulu cared for Mandela’s children when he and her husband were imprisoned together on Robben Island after being sentenced to life in jail on charges of plotting to overthrow the apartheid regime. ”It is a well-known fact that the Sisulus and the Mandelas share a strong bond that spanned generations,” the family said in a statement. ”It is these family ties that saw Mama Sisulu being the primary guardian and caregiver of (his first wife) Evelyn Mandela’s children during the long period of Nelson Mandela’s incarceration.”
Sisulu remained close to Mandela after her husband’s death in 2003. She was among the first people to visit the 92-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner when he fell ill with a respiratory infection in January and was hospitalised for two days. Mandela’s foundation said “South Africa has lost a treasure”. Born Nontsikelelo Thethiwe in Transkei on October 21, 1918, Sisulu married Walter in 1944, with Mandela as the best man. A nurse by profession, she joined the ANC women’s league in 1948 and helped organise the women’s movement against apartheid-era pass laws, segregated education and other discriminatory legislation. Her activism and her association with top ANC leaders saw her held in solitary confinement, sentenced to house arrest and banned from political activity, while her five children were also arrested and expelled from the country.
She was reunited with her husband — with whom she shared a relationship that The Star newspaper on Friday called “South Africa’s greatest love story” — in 1989. She served four years in parliament before retiring from politics in 1998. Many in South Africa fondly linked her career as a nurse to her role as a national matriarch. She was “a midwife of the South African liberation, a true mother of the nation,” The Star said in an editorial.
Posted by: Newstime Africa
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Readers: I love this.
“You strike a woman, you strike a rock.”
Photo of Albertina Sisulu, then president of the United Democratic Front, addresses a Free Mandela rally in 1985. Photograph: Selwyn Tait/Time & Life Picture
Sisulu was the leader in 1956 of a march on Pretoria by thousands of women of all races opposing the extension to women of pass laws — which restricted the movement of black South Africans. This above quote was the slogan of the 1956 March.
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michelle
Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)
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