home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- WORLD, Page 28Lunch with Nelson
-
-
- When visitors arrive for an approved visit with Mandela, they
- drive through the prison farm's main gate and across its rustic
- grounds until they reach a fenced-in compound. After registering
- at a guard station, leaving cameras behind, guests are ushered into
- the parlor of a three-bedroom stucco cottage where Mandela has been
- incarcerated since recovering from tuberculosis in 1988.
-
- "Pitch yourselves," says a white man calling himself Mr. Swart,
- who serves as half warder, half butler. "Mr. Mandela will not be
- long." Swart was once a guard on Robben Island, where Mandela was
- imprisoned under harsh conditions for nearly two decades.
-
- Three attorneys visited at a specified time last month. "We
- had tried to arrange our own date, but we were told that he was a
- busy man," says Keith Kunene, head of the Black Lawyers'
- Association. Mandela gave them a tour that included a room where
- he gets a weekly medical exam, a modest gym and a small outdoor
- swimming pool. He is permitted a TV and radio but not a shortwave
- receiver, which would pick up foreign broadcasts. Before talking
- politics, he hinted that the parlor might be bugged and asked Swart
- to bring some Cokes. Later Swart served lunch. Mandela cleared the
- table.
-
- When Mandela speaks with visitors, Swart sits in the next room,
- positioned so that he sees Mandela but the guests cannot see Swart.
- Guests must leave before 4 p.m., when Swart goes off duty. From
- then until 7 the next morning, South Africa's most famous prisoner
- is alone.