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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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90
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jul_sep
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07021010.000
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<text>
<title>
(Jul. 02, 1990) A Hero's Welcome
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
July 02, 1990 Nelson Mandela:A Hero In America
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 14
A Hero's Welcome
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Mandela arrives in the U.S. seeking support against apartheid
and finds that Americans want something too: a chance to hail
him
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Julie Johnson/Washington, Sylvester
Monroe/Los Angeles and Janice C. Simpson/New York
</p>
<p> On one level Nelson Mandela is merely a man of extraordinary
courage whose commitment to racial justice never flagged during
27 years in South African prisons. In another sense he is a
"loyal and disciplined member" of the African National
Congress, a dedicated revolutionary who humbly submits to the
collective leadership of the antiapartheid group. But on a more
transcendent plane, where history is made and myths are forged,
Mandela is a hero, a man, like those described by author Joseph
Campbell, who has emerged from a symbolic grave "reborn, made
great and filled with creative power."
</p>
<p> In this era of cynicism, such legendary figures have all but
disappeared in the U.S. Martyrdom at an early age was necessary
to lift John and Robert Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr. and
Malcolm X to the status of secular saints. Mandela is unique
among heroes because he is a living embodiment of black
liberation. Like Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer enjoying their
own eulogies from a hiding place in the church, he can bathe
in the adulation of a worldwide throng yearning to, if not
touch the hem of his garment, at least catch a glimpse of him
whirring by in a motorcade.
</p>
<p> Mandela may lack the rousing, bred-in-the-pulpit style of
black orators like King or Jesse Jackson. His soft-spoken
manner and unflappable dignity bespeak his background as a
lawyer, a single-minded political organizer and a longtime
prisoner still blinking a bit in the spotlight. But Mandela's
magnetism is palpable, the consequence of his endurance and
determination in the fight against South Africa's white-minority
government. He fires the pride of African Americans and
touches a deep desire in the psyche of Americans both black and
white for a leader who might rekindle the biracial coalition
that destroyed their country's own version of apartheid a
generation ago, then fell apart during the long, hot summers
of the '60s.
</p>
<p> Such yearnings help explain the torrent of emotion that
erupted when Mandela arrived in New York City last week on the
first leg of a twelve-day, eight-city U.S. tour. For one brief,
wistful moment, a city that had been pounded by a series of
violent racial incidents seemed to vibrate with one voice
shouting "Mandela!" More than 750,000 people lined the streets
of lower Manhattan as Mandela sped by in a bulletproof glass
chamber borne on a flatbed truck. At a rally on the steps of
City Hall, Mandela was presented with the key to the city by
Mayor David Dinkins, one of the five African-American mayors
who will welcome him on his trip (a sixth, Marion Barry of
Washington, will be too embroiled in his trial on
drug-possession and perjury charges to take part in his city's
celebration).
</p>
<p> The next day Mandela captivated more than 3,000 people
gathered at Riverside Church by joining in an exuberant
rendition of the toyi-toyi, a South African dance of
celebration. That night 100,000 people jammed Harlem's Africa
Square, content to gaze at the visiting hero whose voice could
barely be heard over a feeble public-address system. Later,
50,000 cheered Mandela at a rally in Yankee Stadium, where he
delighted his audience by donning a baseball cap and declaring,
</p>
<p> Despite its resemblance to a superstar tour, Mandela's visit
to the U.S. has a deeply serious purpose. His objective is to
shore up the A.N.C.'s negotiating position as it enters into
talks with South African President F.W. de Klerk about the
shape of a new constitution that would for the first time
enfranchise the 26 million blacks who represent 68% of South
Africa's population. Mandela is seeking assurances that the
U.S. will not prematurely loosen the economic sanctions it
imposed on Pretoria in 1986. He is also looking for "money in
buckets" to help the A.N.C., unbanned in February for the
first time in 29 years, change from a militant underground
force to an aboveground political organization.
</p>
<p> But just as Mandela is seeking something from Americans,
Americans are seeking something from him. Politicians hurry to
pose with him, community leaders draw inspiration--and status--from his proximity, longtime antiapartheid activists take
satisfaction from the mere sight of him. For a sometimes
dispirited American civil rights coalition, Mandela provides,
as he has before, a rallying point and common cause. For the
many blacks who have begun to call themselves African Americans,
he is a flesh-and-blood exemplar of what an African can be.
For Americans of all colors, weary of their nation's perennial
racial standoffs, his visit offers the opportunity for a
full-throated expression of their no less perennial hope for
reconciliation.
</p>
<p> If Mandela can serve all those purposes, it is partly
because for so long he remained an unknown quantity. Emerging
from the enforced silence of a prison cell, he arrived in the
U.S. more as a symbol of courage and hope than as a politician
with well-known positions. Even when his positions were
unequivocally stated, they were sometimes overlooked last week.
New York Mayor David Dinkins could hail his guest as "a man of
peace," a title that acknowledges Mandela's exemplary lack of
bitterness toward his former captors, while sidestepping his
refusal to disown violence as a means of effecting political
change in South Africa.
</p>
<p> Mandela heartened Americans by emphasizing that he
envisioned a multiracial future for his country, with full
respect for the rights of the white minority. He promised
potential investors that their ventures would be welcome in a
South Africa in which everyone, regardless of race, had the
vote. Nonetheless, some of his remarks inevitably drew him into
the maelstrom of U.S. politics.
</p>
<p> Even before he arrived in New York, there were rumblings
among American Jews about Mandela's praise for the Palestine
Liberation Organization. He has met with Yasser Arafat three
times since his release from prison in February. Much of that
concern had been put to rest--or at least diplomatically laid
aside--after a June 10 meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, at
which Mandela assured a contingent of American Jewish leaders
that he supported Israel's right to exist within secure
borders. There was no such comfort for Cuban Americans in
Miami, where Mandela is scheduled to arrive on Wednesday. They
are threatening to stage demonstrations against Mandela's
expressions of gratitude for Fidel Castro's support during
Mandela's years of imprisonment.
</p>
<p> The contretemps with Jews threatened to flare anew after a
televised "town meeting" presided over by Nightline's Ted
Koppel. Mandela had kind words again for Arafat, Castro and
even Libya's Muammar Gaddafi. They "support our struggle to the
hilt," was his explanation. When asked about the human-rights
shortcomings of Libya and Cuba, Mandela retorted that the
A.N.C. had "no time to be looking to the internal affairs of
other countries."
</p>
<p> Jewish groups, at least, have been muted in their response
thus far, and are unlikely to mount large protests during the
remainder of Mandela's trip. That will remove one potential
complication from the hastily arranged tour. It was only on May
11 that 70 supporters of the antiapartheid movement, including
activists, politicians, labor leaders and business people,
convened in Washington to discuss arrangements. That led to the
formation of an organizing committee headed by Randall
Robinson, executive director of the antiapartheid group
TransAfrica; Lindiwe Mabuza, chief representative of the A.N.C.
in the U.S.; and the singer Harry Belafonte. Long before
Mandela left Johannesburg on June 4 for Botswana, the first
stop on his tour, they were deluged with requests for
appearances and meetings. So many of the entreaties were
honored that two weeks ago A.N.C. leaders in the Zambian
capital of Lusaka requested that the tour be pared down.
</p>
<p> The eight U.S. cities that were finally named as stopovers
were chosen to serve various purposes. New York, Los Angeles
and Washington were foregone conclusions--three centers of
money, clout and glitter that have sizable black communities.
Boston was chosen because Senator Edward Kennedy had extended
an invitation to Mandela while he was still in jail. Atlanta
was included so that Mandela could visit the grave of King and
honor the American civil rights movement. Detroit, Miami and
Oakland offered opportunities to pay respects to the labor
unions that have been staunch supporters of the antiapartheid
movement.
</p>
<p> Even with the effort to limit the demands upon his time,
there were fears that Mandela would be overtaxed. His crowded
American itinerary would test the stamina of a presidential
campaigner, much less a frail-looking 71-year-old recovering
from surgery to remove a benign cyst from his bladder.
Mandela's arrival in New York from Montreal had to be delayed
by two hours to give him more time to rest.
</p>
<p> There was also some concern within Mandela's entourage that
certain American politicians would take advantage of his
presence and upstage him. At the top of the list was Jesse
Jackson, who had a way of getting into camera range at nearly
every point along Mandela's New York route. The New York-based
organizers of the Harlem rally made a point of keeping Jackson
off the list of speakers, despite his best efforts to be added
to the program. It didn't help when the master of ceremonies
told the crowd, "I know for many of us it's been a long time
since we've really loved a leader."
</p>
<p> Like a media-savvy pol--and a single-minded revolutionary--Mandela repeated at every opportunity his simple line that
because apartheid is still alive and well, it is too soon to
reward Pretoria for the reforms De Klerk has made, some of
which are more cosmetic than real. Mandela can also hope to
return home with several million dollars in new contributions
to the A.N.C. In New York a $2,500-a-ticket fund raiser hosted
by Eddie Murphy, Spike Lee and Robert De Niro aimed to raise
$500,000 from a celebrity crowd that included Paul Newman,
Joanne Woodward and Mike Tyson. At another gathering the same
night in the Park Avenue apartment of prominent Democratic Party
backers Arthur and Mathilde Krim, a crowd of well-heeled
figures from the business world chipped in another $500,000.
</p>
<p> By one measure Mandela's trip was a success before he ever
set out. "This is the consolidation of the political
credibility of the A.N.C.," declares the Rev. William Howard,
past president of the National Council of Churches and a
20-year veteran of the antiapartheid fight in the U.S. "Four
or five years ago, the very top leadership couldn't even get
a meeting with the person on the Africa desk at the State
Department. Now the President has invited Mandela to the White
House, and everybody wants to meet with him."
</p>
<p> But the joyous reception of Mandela was also a rite of
self-congratulation for the American civil rights activists who
have used the struggle in South Africa as a rallying cry. Such
leaders had started to make connections with the battle against
apartheid long ago. The American Committee on Africa, the first
antiapartheid organization in the U.S., was created in 1953.
But it was during the 1980s that civil rights activists
discovered in the fight to free Mandela an effort they could
throw themselves into with gusto--and little moral ambiguity.
</p>
<p> That discovery came at a time when the Reagan Administration
treated the civil rights agenda with indifference, if not
outright hostility, and the movement had become fractured over
intractable disagreements about increasingly abstract concerns
like affirmative action. By comparison, apartheid was an issue
as clear-cut and compelling--and televisable--as a
segregated lunch counter in Birmingham. It offered a focal
point for the inchoate resentments many felt of the greed and
selfishness spawned during the Reagan years.
</p>
<p> As such, the movement to force colleges and universities to
divest their holdings in companies that do business in South
Africa captured the imagination of the mostly listless campus
generation. "The South African issue caught on in 1985 in a way
that no issue had since the 1960s," says Robert Price, a
professor of political science at the University of California,
Berkeley. "We were briefly back into a period of politicization
and mobilization, which we had not seen since the '70s." By now
over 150 colleges, 80 cities, 26 states and 17 counties have
divested their stock in companies that do business with South
Africa.
</p>
<p> It was in 1984 that TransAfrica, a 13-year-old
Washington-based lobbying organization, concocted a strategy
for broadening the antiapartheid campaign. On Thanksgiving eve,
TransAfrica's Robinson; Walter Fauntroy, congressional delegate
for the District of Columbia; and Mary Frances Berry, a member
of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, paid a visit to the South
African embassy in Washington and refused to leave until
Mandela was released and apartheid dismantled. They were
arrested.
</p>
<p> Over the next five years, more then 4,000 protesters,
including Amy Carter, daughter of former President Jimmy
Carter, then Senator Lowell Weicker and singer Stevie Wonder,
would follow them to jail. Another 5,000 were arrested at South
African consulates around the country. By that time the
movement had developed powerful friends on Capitol Hill,
including Kennedy and his fellow Democratic Senators Alan
Cranston of California and Paul Simon of Illinois. They saw in
the antiapartheid movement an opportunity to strike a blow
against the otherwise unassailable Reagan.
</p>
<p> Their triumph came in 1986, with the passage of sanctions.
The law banned new U.S. investments in South Africa, prohibited
imports of ore and farm products and revoked the landing
privileges of South Africa Airways. The sanctions must remain
in effect until South Africa releases all political prisoners,
repeals the state of emergency in all provinces, legalizes all
democratic political parties, establishes a timetable for
eliminating apartheid and begins talks with black leaders.
</p>
<p> The American coalition's victory was made sweeter because
the law was passed over Reagan's veto. It effectively destroyed
Reagan's policy of "constructive engagement," which was
designed to quietly prod South Africa into making changes
without cutting the economic links between the two countries.
</p>
<p> Mandela's freedom was for so long the focus of America's
antiapartheid movement that some people fear the euphoria over
his release will dissipate concern over what remains to be
done. Talks between the A.N.C. and Pretoria are not expected
to resume until mid-July. In the meantime, whatever hope there
may have been in South Africa that Mandela's release would
quickly usher in a new multiracial democracy has begun to fade.
Now activists say it is important to draw attention to De
Klerk's failure to take such steps as lifting the Internal
Security Act, which permits thousands of South Africans to be
imprisoned without trial. "We have to think about civil
disobedience again," says Robinson. "Our challenge is to help
Americans distinguish between what is important and what is
not."
</p>
<p> Still, De Klerk's skillfully orchestrated reforms have
stolen some of Mandela's momentum. Just as the black leader
headed for North America, the South African President lifted
the state of emergency from all provinces except Natal, the
site of fierce fighting between A.N.C. militants and supporters
of the rival Inkatha movement. Then, on the eve of Mandela's
arrival in New York, De Klerk made good on his promise to
revoke the Separate Amenities Act that for nearly four decades
had legalized segregation. The South African Parliament
repealed the law, opening the country's parks, beaches, swimming
pools, services and public buildings to the black majority.
Though they fail to undo the main structures of apartheid, the
reforms are plainly more than mere window dressing.
</p>
<p> The prospect of further change that those concessions open
up is one reason that Mandela's life--and De Klerk's--could
be at risk. A South African newspaper, Vrye Weekblad, last week
reported that it had uncovered a right-wing plot to murder
Mandela, De Klerk and other figures. According to the paper,
the plot was worked out by former Nazi Captain Heinrich
Beissner, a regional head of the right-wing Afrikaner
Resistance Movement. It called for Mandela to be shot by a
sniper at Johannesburg's Jan Smuts Airport when he returned to
South Africa on July 18. The Afrikaner group also allegedly
planned to blow up power stations, assassinate Members of
Parliament and poison the water supply to the black township
of Soweto. Though the South African government did confirm that
it had arrested eleven whites, it would say only that they were
released after questioning.
</p>
<p> Mandela is looking for more than courtesy when he meets with
George Bush at the White House this week. Though Bush has never
supported U.S. sanctions, his Assistant Secretary of State for
Africa, Herman Cohen, promised in an interview last week that
the U.S. "will not act precipitously." But he also said that
in the Administration's view, all the legal preconditions for
lifting sanctions have been met, except for the release of all
prisoners and lifting the state of emergency in the province
of Natal. Many members of Congress reply that South Africa has
not satisfied a condition spelled out in the sanctions law:
substantial progress toward dismantling apartheid.
</p>
<p> The betting is that Bush will not loosen sanctions now, in
part as a gesture to black voters he is trying to lure to the
G.O.P. Mandela's aim is to leave Washington with some sign that
the Administration will not retreat from that grudging support.
Continued U.S. sanctions would give Mandela a powerful hand to
play when he and other A.N.C. officials eventually sit down to
negotiations with the Pretoria government. It would also help
Mandela when he arrives next week in Britain, where Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher has been anxious to reward South
Africa for the gestures De Klerk has made so far.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the White House is angry at what it sees as an
attempt by Democrats and civil rights groups to use Mandela's
visit to pressure Bush to put aside his objections to the
pending Civil Rights Act of 1990--or else force him to endure
the embarrassment of vetoing it while Mandela is still in the
U.S. The bill seeks to lessen the effect of several recent
Supreme Court decisions that diluted existing federal
affirmative-action and antidiscrimination law. In particular,
the rulings made it harder for victims of discrimination to
prove bias and bring lawsuits for redress in court. Bush has
insisted that he will veto the bill if it is not amended to
correct provisions that he says could have the effect of
requiring employers to adopt racial quotas in hiring.
</p>
<p> At a White House meeting with G.O.P. lawmakers last week,
chief of staff John Sununu worried out loud that the bill could
be brought for a vote soon in the Senate. "The White House is
apoplectic about the bill coming up while Mandela is in town,"
says one participant in the talks. Soon after, the Senate
decided to take a preliminary vote on the bill just 20 minutes
before Mandela appears to address a joint session of Congress.
</p>
<p> At the invitation of the White House, representatives of
civil rights groups began talks with the White House last month
to frame a compromise bill that Bush could sign. But with the
White House still having failed to put forward any alternative
language, the civil rights groups are saying privately that
they may withdraw from the talks, which they charge may be no
more than an Administration device to delay Senate action on
the bill.
</p>
<p> As the showdown on the civil rights bill demonstrates,
Mandela's presence in the U.S. throws a sharper light on
domestic racial matters. At the first stop on his itinerary,
the mostly black Boys and Girls High School in Brooklyn, the
crowd needed little encouragement to draw comparisons between
the problems of South African blacks and their own dilemmas.
As he spoke about the inadequacy of schools for blacks in South
Africa, some of his listeners shouted back, "Same here!" When
he went on to complain that in South Africa whites control the
education of blacks, others in the crowd picked up the chant:
</p>
<p> Such powerful emotional connections are likely to ensure
that the U.S. keeps up the pressure as Mandela wages his battle
against apartheid. But at the same time that his legend grows
here, the realities of day-to-day political struggle have cut
into his popularity at home, even among those whose aspirations
he has spent half a lifetime representing. Were he to become
the first elected black leader of postapartheid South Africa,
the resulting immersion in the messy doings of government could
make things still more trying for him. Knowing that he remains
a hero in America could help to sustain him if those difficult
days ever come.
</p>
<p> "Like the leaders of the 1960s American civil rights
movement, Mandela represents the kind of moral leadership
we need throughout the world."
</p>
<p>-- Zaria Griffin, 43-year-old entrepreneur
selling his own T shirts
</p>
<p> "He is an inspiration for the children. He is something
tangible, not just someone in the history books."
</p>
<p>-- Dinetta Gilmore, Brooklyn
</p>
<p> "I want to see this man!"
</p>
<p>-- Thelma Cagatno, from Guatemala, working as a housekeeper
in New York
</p>
<p> "He is among the two or three undisappointing figures in the
world who remain uncompromised. He is clearly willing to die
for his cause, but not in a lunatic way."
</p>
<p>-- Amanda McMurray, New York
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>