Flap Your Lips Friday
Posted by Michelle Moquin on December 6th, 2013
Good morning.
Nelson Mandela died yesterday. He went from prisoner to President, but in the eyes of many, including myself, he was a Hero and a peacemaker who dedicated his life to fighting white minority rule bringing apartheid to an end, and freeing the African people. And that is just a few of his achievements in his 95 years of life.
Although he has passed, Mandela’s wisdom, unwavering commitment, and courageous achievements have left a lasting impression that will continue to inspire, influence, and move us for many more years to come.
It’s hard not to agree with Obama’s words on Mandela:
“Today he’s gone home, and we’ve lost one of the most influential, courageous and profoundly good human beings that any of us will share time with on this earth,” Obama said.
May this sweet and charismatic man rest in peace knowing that he brought so much good to the world.
A beautiful write from the Chicago Tribune, honoring an amazing man:
NELSON MANDELA: 1918-2013
Nelson Mandela remembered: ‘He achieved more than could be expected of any man’
Nelson Mandela served for five years as South Africa’s first black president after his African National Congress party helped end apartheid in 1994. He has died at the age of 95 (Source: Bloomberg)
Nelson Mandela, who guided South Africa from the shackles of apartheid to multi-racial democracy and became an international icon of peace and reconciliation, died Thursday at age 95.
Mandela will be laid to rest at his ancestral village of Qunu in the Eastern Cape on Dec. 15, President Jacob Zuma said on Friday.
A week of national mourning would include an open-air memorial service at Johannesburg’s Soccer City stadium – the site of the 2010 World Cup final – on Dec. 10, Zuma said.
Desmond Tutu said Friday that Mandela’s legacy would carry on.
“The sun will rise tomorrow, and the next day and the next. … It may not appear as bright as yesterday, but life will carry on,” the retired Anglican bishop said in a statement.
“To suggest that South Africa might go up in flames — as some have predicted — is to discredit South Africans and Madiba’s legacy,” Tutu said, using Mandela’s clan name, a term of affection and respect.
Imprisoned for nearly three decades for his fight against white minority rule, Mandela emerged determined to use his prestige and charisma to bring down apartheid while avoiding a civil war.
“The time for the healing of the wounds has come. The moment to bridge the chasms that divide us has come,” Mandela said in his acceptance speech on becoming South Africa’s first black president in 1994.
“We have, at last, achieved our political emancipation.”
President Barack Obama hailed Mandela as a leader who left his country with a legacy of freedom and peace with the world.
“He achieved more than could be expected of any man,” Obama said at the White House shortly after the announcement of Mandela’s death.
“Today he’s gone home, and we’ve lost one of the most influential, courageous and profoundly good human beings that any of us will share time with on this earth,” Obama said.
‘The time for the healing of the wounds has come’
Nelson Mandela guided South Africa from the shackles of apartheid to multi-racial democracy, as an icon of peace and reconciliation who came to embody the struggle for justice around the world.
Imprisoned for nearly three decades for his fight against white minority rule, Mandela emerged determined to use his prestige and charisma to bring down apartheid while avoiding a civil war.
“The time for the healing of the wounds has come. The moment to bridge the chasms that divide us has come,” Mandela said in his acceptance speech on becoming South Africa’s first black president in 1994.
“We have, at last, achieved our political emancipation.”
In 1993, Mandela was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, an honor he shared with F.W. de Klerk, the white Afrikaner leader who freed him from prison three years earlier and negotiated the end of apartheid.
Mandela went on to play a prominent role on the world stage as an advocate of human dignity in the face of challenges ranging from political repression to AIDS.
He formally left public life in June 2004 before his 86th birthday, telling his adoring countrymen: “Don’t call me. I’ll call you”. But he remained one of the world’s most revered public figures, combining celebrity sparkle with an unwavering message of freedom, respect and human rights.
Whether defending himself at his own treason trial in 1963 or addressing world leaders years later as a greying elder statesman, he radiated an image of moral rectitude expressed in measured tones, often leavened by a mischievous humor.
“He is at the epicenter of our time, ours in South Africa, and yours, wherever you are,” Nadine Gordimer, the South African writer and Nobel Laureate for Literature, once remarked.
Mandela’s years behind bars made him the world’s most celebrated political prisoner and a leader of mythic stature for millions of black South Africans and other oppressed people far beyond his country’s borders.
Charged with capital offenses in the 1963 Rivonia Trial, his statement from the dock was his political testimony.
“During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination.
“I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities,” he told the court.
“It is an ideal I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”
Destined to lead
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was born on July 18, 1918, destined to lead as the son of the chief councilor to the paramount chief of the Thembu people in Transkei.
He chose to devote his life to the fight against white domination. He studied at Fort Hare University, an elite black college, but left in 1940 short of completing his studies and became involved with the African National Congress (ANC), founding its Youth League in 1944 with Oliver Tambo and Walter Sisulu.
Mandela worked as a law clerk then became a lawyer who ran one of the few practices that served blacks.
In 1952 he and others were charged for violating the Suppression of Communism Act but their nine-month sentence was suspended for two years.
Mandela was among the first to advocate armed resistance to apartheid, going underground in 1961 to form the ANC’s armed wing, Umkhonto weSizwe, or ‘Spear of the Nation’ in Zulu.
He left South Africa and travelled the continent and Europe, studying guerrilla warfare and building support for the ANC.
After his return in 1962, Mandela was arrested and sentenced to five years for incitement and illegally leaving the country. While serving that sentence, he was charged with sabotage and plotting to overthrow the government along with other anti-apartheid leaders in the Rivonia Trial.
Branded a terrorist by his enemies, Mandela was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1964, isolated from millions of his countrymen as they suffered oppression, violence and forced resettlement under the apartheid regime of racial segregation.
He was incarcerated on Robben Island, a penal colony off Cape Town, where he would spend the next 18 years before being moved to mainland prisons.
He was behind bars when an uprising broke out in the huge township of Soweto in 1976 and when others erupted in violence in the 1980s. But when the regime realized it was time to negotiate, it was Mandela to whom it turned.
In his later years in prison, he met President P.W. Botha and his successor de Klerk.
When he was released on February 11, 1990, walking away from the Victor Verster prison hand-in-hand with his wife Winnie, the event was watched live by television viewers across the world.
“As I finally walked through those gates … I felt even at the age of 71 that my life was beginning anew. My 10,000 days of imprisonment were at last over,” Mandela wrote of that day.
Elections and reconciliation
In the next four years, thousands of people died in political violence. Most were blacks killed in fighting between ANC supporters and Zulus loyal to Mangosuthu Buthelezi’s Inkatha Freedom Party, although right-wing whites also staged violent actions to upset the moves towards democracy.
Mandela prevented a racial explosion after the murder of popular Communist Party leader Chris Hani by a white assassin in 1993, appealing for calm in a national television address. That same year, he and de Klerk were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Talks between the ANC and the government began in 1991, leading to South Africa’s first all-race elections on April 27, 1994.
The run-up to the vote was marred by fighting, including gun battles in Johannesburg townships and virtual war in the Zulu stronghold of KwaZulu Natal.
But Mandela campaigned across the country, enthralling adoring crowds of blacks and wooing whites with assurances that there was a place for them in the new South Africa.
The election result was never in doubt and his inauguration in Pretoria on May 10, 1994, was a celebration of a peoples’ freedom.
Mandela made reconciliation the theme of his presidency. He took tea with his former jailers and won over many whites when he donned the jersey of South Africa’s national rugby team – once a symbol of white supremacy – at the final of the World Cup in 1995 at Johannesburg’s Ellis Park stadium.
The hallmark of Mandela’s mission was the Truth and Reconciliation Commission which investigated apartheid crimes on both sides and tried to heal the wounds. It also provided a model for other countries torn by civil strife.
In 1999, Mandela, often criticized for having a woolly grasp of economics, handed over to younger leaders – a voluntary departure from power cited as an example to long-ruling African leaders.
A restful retirement was not on the cards as Mandela shifted his energies to fighting South Africa’s AIDS crisis.
He spoke against the stigma surrounding the infection, while successor Thabo Mbeki was accused of failing to comprehend the extent of the crisis.
The fight became personal in early 2005 when Mandela lost his only surviving son to the disease.
But the stress of his long struggle contributed to the break-up of his marriage to equally fierce anti-apartheid campaigner Winnie.
The country shared the pain of their divorce in 1996 before watching his courtship of Graca Machel, widow of Mozambican President Samora Machel, whom he married on his 80th birthday in 1998.
Friends adored “Madiba”, the clan name by which he is known.
People lauded his humanity, kindness, attention and dignity.
Unable to shake the habits of prison, Mandela rose daily between 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. to exercise and read. He drank little and was a fervent anti-smoker.
An amateur boxer in his younger days, Mandela often said the discipline and tactics drawn from training helped him to endure prison and the political battles after his release.
‘If cancer wins I will still be the better winner’
But prison and old age took their toll on his health.
Mandela was treated in the 1980s for tuberculosis and later required an operation to repair damage to his eyes as well as treatment for prostate cancer in 2001. His spirit, however, remained strong.
“If cancer wins I will still be the better winner,” he told reporters in September of that year. “When I go to the next world, the first thing I will do is look for an ANC office to renew my membership.”
Most South Africans are proud of their post-apartheid multi-racial ‘Rainbow Nation’.
But Mandela’s legacy of tolerance and reconciliation has been threatened in recent years by squabbling between factions in the ANC and social tensions in a country that, despite its political liberation, still suffers great inequalities.
Mandela’s last major appearance on the global stage came in 2010 when he donned a fur cap in the South African winter and rode on a golf cart, waving to an exuberant crowd of 90,000 at the soccer World Cup final, one of the biggest events in the country’s post-apartheid history.
“I leave it to the public to decide how they should remember me,” he said on South African television before his retirement.
“But I should like to be remembered as an ordinary South African who together with others has made his humble contribution.”
*****
Readers: When I think of all that this man has done, and all that he has given of his life so that others may have a better life, I am moved beyond words. I think of my own life and what more I can do for others.
If we all only did for each other a tenth of what Mandela has done in his life for others, the world would be drastically changed. If there is one thing we can do, can we remember this courageous man, who achieved more than could be expected of any man, and be inspired to do more ourselves, for each other?
Peace & Love.
Blog me.
Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.
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michelle
Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)
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December 6th, 2013 at 11:29 am
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/12/06/rick-santorum-nelson-mandela_n_4398155.html?utm_hp_ref=nelson-mandela
Rick Santorum: Nelson Mandela Fought ‘Great Injustice,’ Just Like Republicans Are Battling Obamacare
753 people are discussing this article with 817 comments
Santorum is an idiot who wouldn’t get the ink he does if he weren’t a white bigot. Communism may have helped the South Africans gain freedom from the “democratic” government of the racist regime that terrorized Mandela’s people for 50 years with the help of another great white democracy, the US.
It was the CIA that turned in Mandela to his South African tormentors.
“The report, scheduled for publication on Sunday, quoted an unidentified retired official who said that a senior C.I.A. officer told him shortly after Mr. Mandela’s arrest: ”We have turned Mandela over to the South African Security branch. We gave them every detail, what he would be wearing, the time of day, just where he would be.” http://www.nytimes.com/1990/06/10/world/cia-tie-reported-in-mandela-arrest.html
December 6th, 2013 at 12:40 pm
The world lost a treasure in Mandela, may he RIP.
James, that may be an oversimplification but I hear you.
Carter, I was 25, he was superman w that Clark Kent cover, extremely attractive in every way, it’s cool, we’ve lived it together as one of my favorite ‘phantom’ men ; ). There were several reasons at the time why I didn’t act (all incredibly lame to me now : ).
Luv, Zen Lill
December 6th, 2013 at 4:40 pm
Hamba kahle, Madiba (Rest in Peace)
December 6, 2013
The Loss of a Giant
With the passing of Nelson Mandela, the world has lost a leader who advanced the cause of equality and human rights, who overcame a history of oppression in South Africa to expand the reach of freedom worldwide. May the life of Nelson Mandela long stand as the ultimate tribute to the triumph of hope. May his story long remind us to always look forward with optimism to the future. May it be a comfort to his family, to his friends and loved ones, to the people of South Africa that so many mourn the loss of this extraordinary man and incredible leader at this sad time.
Innovation in America
Few places exemplify America’s potential for trailblazing innovation more than San Francisco. Innovation and the entrepreneurial spirit are cornerstones of America’s economic growth and global competitiveness. That is why we must ensure the United States patent system works to support – not suppress – the success of American innovation.
Critical to protecting America’s pioneers is preventing non-practicing entities, or patent ‘trolls,’ from unfairly using legal processes to badger small businesses and consumers. This week, I voted in favor of H.R. 3309, the Innovation Act, a bill that seeks to address these issues. While it is unfortunate the bill does not go far enough to address pre-trial demand letters that can confuse and cost entrepreneurs and it includes a controversial fee-shifting provision that could tilt the legal system against innovators, I hope it can be improved before it is enacted into law. In Congress, we must do more to prevent poor quality patents and bring an end to devastating sequester cuts that have cost the Patent and Trademark Office nearly $150 million in FY2013; have resulted in 1000 fewer patent examiners; and have needlessly delayed a vital patent office in Silicon Valley.
Make HIV/AIDS a Thing of the Past
Today, nations of the world stand together in the effort to eradicate HIV/AIDS once and for all.
We know that AIDS is a resourceful disease, but we will be even more resourceful and cunning in our fight against it. We cannot, and we will not, allow AIDS to claw its way back from the brink. In the name of those loved ones we have lost, and those we might save, we rededicate ourselves to prevention, testing, treatment, and the search for a cure. We accept our shared responsibility to fight HIV/AIDS across the globe, and we vow to make the dream of an AIDS-free generation a reality. For information on basic testing, HIV/AIDS facts, and other useful material, please visit AIDS.gov.
Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi volunteers at a workday for the National AIDS Memorial Grove in San Francisco in July.
Affordable Care for San Franciscans
Every day, I hear from San Franciscans who have benefited from the Affordable Care Act. I received a letter from one of these young adults, Rebecca, a 23-year-old manager at a fundraising firm for non-profits. After the Affordable Care Act was signed into law, Rebecca was able to stay on her parents’ health plan, through her 26th birthday, giving her more time to focus on putting away money to earn her Bachelor’s degree. Recently, Rebecca was diagnosed with a debilitating disease resulting in severe nerve damage that required neurosurgery. Without health insurance, she would have faced astronomical hospital bills that would have saddled her with enormous debt before she reached her 24th birthday. Providing our nation’s young people with more opportunities to pursue their hopes and dreams is just one of the many ways the Affordable Care Act benefits the American people.
To share your story with my office, please visit my website.
Please feel free to forward this information to your family and friends. To learn more about these efforts, to express your views, or to sign up for email updates, please visit my website. I am also on Twitter at http://twitter.com/NancyPelosi.
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December 6th, 2013 at 4:42 pm
LeTa0 the reason you were allowed to post that on Huff Post is they don’t want the discussion to get centered on what those white presidents were doing to help South Africa to subjugate the country’s true citizens.
December 6th, 2013 at 10:49 pm
If I were Nelson Mandela, I would have had all those evil white boys rounded up and hung.
December 6th, 2013 at 11:50 pm
We eat humans and have no desire to stop. However, we prefer to eat humans that have been ethically captured and treated humanely prior to them ending up on our tables. We do not accept the recommendation of the H^H.
There’s no reason on earth why humans intended for consumption can’t still be treated with respect – before they become food. They are the dominant creatures on their planet and they do feel physical stimuli (i.e., pain).
There are even studies to show that human flavor and texture changes in response to how the humans are treated while they are alive: well-cared-for humans have a much better flavor and consistency.
Strict standards applied to humans intended for consumption ought to be a GOOD thing.
December 7th, 2013 at 12:27 am
In as much as you are not dining the way civilized beings do. I hardly see why your input on the subject matters.
December 7th, 2013 at 12:31 am
3^/sD, it is our understanding that unless you are of the party involved in the necessary particulars your advice, suggestions or point of view is irrelevant.
December 7th, 2013 at 12:33 am
3^/sD;
Do you even understand the logistics of what you are asking?
December 7th, 2013 at 8:06 am
It’s a personal preference. Some like the taste of fear.
December 7th, 2013 at 10:50 am
It is the Lactic acid that enriches the meat in humans. So a frightened human taste so much better. Those of you who are not eating from the hoof, are basically eating process meat and hence should have no part of the hunters’ discussion of how their meat should come to their table.