RIP Nelson Mandela
Duderonomy
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Damn.
Duderonomy
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Not sure if Damn is the right word, the man was 95 and had been in truly bad health the last few years.
Rest in Peace to a true agent of change in the world.
RIP.
one of the biggest global impacts of any single person in the last quarter-century
Nelson Mandela Park Public School, 440 Shuter Street, Toronto
At Nelson Mandela Park Public School, we are committed to building a "Culture of Caring" that allows all of our students to reach their maximum potential. Our "Culture of Caring" means:
We care about quality teaching and learning for all of our students;
We care about having high expectations for all of our students;
We care about social justice, and making our world a better place.
I read today that years of forced labor in limestone pits ruined his tear ducts to the point that when he finally got released he couldn't cry.
Today hundreds of millions cried for him.
This.
What many people overlook about Mandela is that, although he eventually moved nearer to the centre, he was effectively still a communist for quite some time after he was freed. It's therefore conceivable that SA could have gone the same way as many other countries where there's been a communist revolution; "Right, lads, today's order of business - who are we putting up against the wall first?" He wasn't about that at all, not even after Afrikaner extremists got a patsy to murder Chris Hani. He could have turned around at that point and said, well, it's obvious that you people can't be trusted and you need to be brought under control. Instead, he praised the Afrikaner woman who witnessed the murder for stepping forward, and emphasised that the focus should be on justice and not revenge. He walked it like he talked it.
Amnesty were never able to officially campaign for his release because of the nature of his conviction - he was a tough firebrand in his day.
b/w Mandela's release was one of those once in a generation JFK moments - I think everyone remembers were they were when they heard that news.
Did not know this. Googled. Thought this was interesting:
Really intersting - didn't realise they were still taking flak for this. I think AI made the right call - it would have shut a lot of doors for the organisation if they'd gone the other route. As far as members were concerned Mandela was always a prominent case and the campaining never stopped. In the 70s all the AI people we knew were active on that front although it still took until the mid 80s before the media got behind it.
The consulate had been in an office downtown, but as soon as the protests started the consular closed up shop.
So protests moved to his home in some upscale neighborhood. (Can't remember where.)
Every week, maybe on Sunday, a few dozen of us would go to his house and march back and forth for a little while. Then a preselected few would go knock on his door. The police would come and arrest them for trespassing. Then we would all go home until next week.
The idea of boycotts/sanctions were just getting off the ground and we were identifying products (I remember frozen fish sticks) and companies doing business in SA.
Soon after that protests swept college campuses, and the divestiture movement took off and had a real impact.
I think one effect was US car companies stopped using chrome which came from SA.
I don't remember the AI controversy. I think AI's position on the SA government was clear.