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Tuesday
Jan082008

Courage and integrity like this is rare...

I have been praying and thinking a great deal about the future of South Africa since the ANC elected Jacob Zuma as their new party president.

One of the most helpful and insightful aids in this journey has been reading Andrew Feinstein's book "After the party - a personal and political journey inside the ANC" - it was suggested to me by my friend Aiden Choles. Thanks Aiden.

I have not been all that shocked or surprised by the revelations of corruption, collusion, and abuse that Feinstein writes about. Perhaps this lack of surprise stems from my cynical approach to politics... I am somewhat skeptical of political motives by the powerful in times of relative peace and prosperity. Somehow being the 'underdog', the one who is fighting for justice and freedom has a different flavour than doing your best to stay in power... However, I am also not surprised since a lot of what I am reading was reported in the mainstream South African media. This encourages me! It means that at least we still have some measure of freedom within Southern African journalism to tell the truth!

There have however been a few very important quotes that have challenged me to consider my own life, my own social convictions, and of course the examine the integrity of my own faith.

The most significant of these is a quote of a statement that Nelson Mandela made to the former President of Apartheid South Africa, PW Botha (die groot krokidil!). In 1985 (5 years before he was released from Prison) PW Botha offered Nelson Mandela freedom if he was willing to give up the fight for justice and equity in South Africa. He turned down the offer with the statement below. Heck... I am just entering the 5th year of my term in my current post. It is a LONG time! But for the sake of truth and justice he said the following:

I cherish my own freedom dearly, but I care even more for your freedom... I am not less life-loving than you are. But I cannot sell my birthright, nor am I prepared to sell the birthright of the people to be free...

Only free men can negotiate. Prisoners cannot enter into contracts... I cannot and will not give any undertaking at a time when I and you, the people, are not free...

Your freedom and mine cannot be separated.

I will return [to prison]. Nelson Mandela, 10 February 1985.

Oh for the courage to live with that kind of conviction! A great man (in fact, a great Methodist!)

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Reader Comments (1)

As the old riddle goes:

How are politicians like a bunch of bananas?

They're all yellow, they hang together, and there's not a straight one among them.

But at least we have a free press, which means that corruption can be (and is) exposed more frequently than it was in the bad old days.

Though how long that will last if JZ becomes president, I'm not sure.

January 10, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSteve Hayes

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