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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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94
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05099916.000
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<text id=94TT0588>
<link 94XP0551>
<link 94TO0160>
<title>
May 09, 1994: South Africa:The Making of a Leader
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 36
The Making of a Leader
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Fond of the symbolic gesture, Nelson Mandela plays up his dreams
but never plays down to his countrymen
</p>
<p>By Richard Stengel/Johannesburg
</p>
<p> Just a short stroll from Nelson Mandela's modest country house
in the Transkei is the even more humble village where he was
born. The round thatched huts of Qunu have no running water
or electricity, and shy herdboys wielding sticks tend the skinny
cattle the same way young Rolihlahla Nelson Mandela did almost
70 years ago. Walking across the green hills above the village
one morning not long ago, Mandela recalled a lesson he learned
as a boy. "When you want to get a herd to move in a certain
direction," he said, "you stand at the back with a stick. Then
a few of the more energetic cattle move to the front and the
rest of the cattle follow. You are really guiding them from
behind." He paused before saying with a smile, "That is how
a leader should do his work."
</p>
<p> No one would suggest that so charismatic a figure as Nelson
Mandela, a doughty and energetic 75, leads from behind. But
Mandela has always made his authority felt on two levels: by
standing at the head of the African National Congress as symbol
and standard bearer and by forming strategy from behind by suggestion,
pressure, indirection. During his career as a politician--a word he proudly uses to describe himself--he has at times
moved out ahead of his colleagues and audaciously created policy,
while at other times he has been content to plant the seed of
an idea that bears fruit only many years later.
</p>
<p> Next week Mandela will become the President of the country whose
government he fought against for so long. Leading a liberation
struggle is a task fundamentally different from heading a government;
Mandela will no longer seek to bring a system down but to build
one up. Yet his style of leadership is suited to his new task,
for he is a practiced seeker of unity and consensus.
</p>
<p> Mandela witnessed the dynamic of leadership early on. Several
times a year, his guardian, Chief Jongintaba, the regent of
the Thembu tribe, presided over what were essentially tribal
town meetings. People came from far and wide to Chief Jongintaba's
royal seat, the Great Place at Mqekezweni. These meetings lasted
days, and did not end until everyone had had a chance to speak
his mind. Rolihlahla sat on the fringes and watched as his guardian
listened in thoughtful silence. Only at the end would Chief
Jongintaba speak, and then it was to nurture a consensus. A
leader, Mandela learned, does not impose a decision. He molds
one.
</p>
<p> The lessons of the Great Place apply today when Mandela chairs
meetings of the National Executive Committee, the ruling body
of the A.N.C. His face becomes a mask as he notes each person's
views and registers the course of the discussion and argument.
He knows the weight of his opinion and holds it in reserve until
it is deemed necessary. If there is a deadlock he attempts to
resolve it. Otherwise he tries to steer the argument toward
consensus.
</p>
<p> Mandela, as someone once observed, is a combination of African
nobility and British aristocracy. He has the punctilious manners
of a Victorian gentleman. (His aides sometimes chastise him
for rising from his chair to greet everyone who approaches him.)
His patrician nature is on display most prominently in his dealings
with President F.W. de Klerk, whom he has often treated as a
kind of bumbling equerry. At the end of the first day of negotiations
for a new constitution in 1991, Mandela gave De Klerk a withering
dressing down: "Even the head of an illegitimate, discredited
minority regime, as his is, has certain moral standards to uphold."
His wrath is cold, not hot; he does not explode at his foes,
he freezes them out.
</p>
<p> At the same time, Mandela possesses a common touch that no amount
of political coaching can inculcate. When Mandela speaks at
banquets, he makes a point of going into the kitchen and shaking
hands with every dishwasher and busboy. On countless occasions,
he will stop in the middle of a street or hallway to talk with
a little boy; his questioning has the rhythm of a catechism.
"How old are you?" he will say. "Four," the boy might whisper.
"Ah, you're a big man, man!" he will reply with a smile. "And
what did you have for breakfast today?"
</p>
<p> One paradox of leadership is that voters are partial to candidates
who seem both bigger than they are and yet are also one of them.
When Mandela lived underground as an outlaw in the early 1960s
and was dubbed the Black Pimpernel by the South African press
for his ability to elude the police, his colleagues marveled
at how he blended in with the people. He usually disguised himself
as a chauffeur; he would don a long dustcoat, hunch his shoulders
and, suddenly, this tall, singularly regal figure was transformed
into one of the huddled masses moving along the streets of Johannesburg.
Even today, at rallies or meetings, the poorest supporter of
the A.N.C. feels he has the right to greet and address his leader.
</p>
<p> Though Mandela may be a natural mass leader, he does not exhibit
all the attributes associated with such charismatic figures.
Yes, Mandela may plunge into ecstatic crowds at rallies, pump
hands, give the clenched-fist A.N.C. salute and dance a few
steps of the toyi-toyi. But when he begins to speak, the cheers
usually turn into a good-natured but puzzled silence. Not for
Mandela the soaring metaphors of Martin Luther King or the rhyming
aphorisms of Jesse Jackson; he addresses his audiences in the
sober, didactic style of an organic-chemistry professor. "I
try not to be a rabble rouser," he says. "The people want things
explained to them clearly and rationally. They recognize when
someone is speaking to them seriously. They want to see how
you handle difficult situations, whether or not you stay calm."
</p>
<p> Mandela rarely practices the modern politician's art of telling
his listeners what he thinks they want to hear. To black audiences,
he declares that democracy and majority rule will not change
the material circumstances of their lives overnight. At the
same time, he informs white audiences that they must take responsibility
for the past and they will have to reconcile themselves to a
future of majority rule. He is the paterfamilias of his nation
(his staff members call him "Tata," which means father), but
he is a stern parent, not a cuddly one.
</p>
<p> For Mandela, consensus must be its own reward, for he does not
always get his way. During his imprisonment on Robben Island,
he wanted to stage a strike to force the warders to address
prisoners with the honorific "Mr." But he was always turned
down by his comrades. Last year he urged the A.N.C. to reduce
the voting age to 14, but his colleagues refused. Once he has
lost, he publicly speaks in favor of the position he opposed.
"I sometimes come to the National Executive Committee with an
idea and they overrule me," he recently observed. "And I obey
them, even when they are wrong," he added with a smile. "That
is democracy."
</p>
<p> Mandela has always taken the long view, and sometimes this gives
him victories in battles that were started decades ago. After
the government began to implement its Bantustan policies in
the 1960s and '70s, a plan to relegate all blacks to poor, quasi-independent
tribal homelands, Mandela urged the A.N.C. to make peace with
the black leaders of these enclaves whom many in the movement
scorned as traitors. The A.N.C. shied away from this policy,
but he kept arguing his case. In the past three years, however,
the A.N.C. has brought these leaders into its embrace.
</p>
<p> His style derives from a hard-won discipline. Oliver Tambo,
his former law partner and the longtime leader of the A.N.C.
in exile who died last year, once described the youthful Mandela
as "passionate, emotional, sensitive, quickly stung to bitterness
and retaliation by insult and patronage." Who can discern those
characteristics in the controlled Nelson Mandela of today? He
now prizes rationality, logic, compromise, and distrusts sentiment.
Prison steeled him, and over the decades he came to see emotion
not as an ally but as a demon to be shunned. How was the man
who emerged from prison different from the one who went in?
His reply: "I came out mature." It is not simply that he harbors
little bitterness in his heart; he knows that bitterness will
not move him an inch closer to his goal.
</p>
<p> If there has been a consistent criticism of Mandela over the
years, it is that he is too willing to see the good in people.
If this is a flaw, it is one he accepts because it grows out
of his great strength, his generosity of heart toward his enemies.
He defends himself by noting that thinking too well of people
sometimes makes them behave better than they otherwise would.
He believes in the essential goodness of the human heart, even
though he has spent a lifetime suffering the wounds of heartless
authorities.
</p>
<p> At home, Mandela will take out his well-thumbed Filofax, find
a number, and telephone a colleague to discuss an issue. However,
he is not a man who is mired in details. Although Mandela did
not even see a television until the 1970s, he understands the
importance of mass-media images, and will make gestures of large
symbolic content, as when he grasped De Klerk's hand at the
end of their recent debate and said he would be proud to work
with his opponent--a man he has publicly labeled untrustworthy.
He is gracious, amiable, gentlemanly, ever the host, always
the subtle master of the situation.
</p>
<p> Even as Mandela voted last week and dutifully smiled in all
directions for the photographers, his mind seemed both on the
past and on the future; he thought back to his fallen comrades
who did not live to share his victory and ahead to how he would
contrive to forge one nation out of a divided land. His moment
of triumph gratifies him but comes with unsought consequences.
While in jail, Mandela was surrounded by armed guards who never
took their eyes off him. Now, wherever Mandela goes he is surrounded
by armed guards who never take their eyes off him. In a sense,
he has exchanged one form of prison for another, and the revolutionary
who was a threat to the state has become the prisoner of fame
and power. In the midst of his election he lamented the fact
that he did not have time to play with his beloved grandchildren.
It is the burden of the leadership he was born to and has achieved.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>