Thursday, December 5, 2013

Farewell to Mandiba

Word has come that Nelson Mandela has died today, aged 95. He had been in frail condition for some time—not only was he in his nineties, but he’d suffered respiratory problems that dated back to his nearly three decades in prison for his anti-apartheid work.

What was neither old nor frail were his strength of character, his absolute integrity and his quiet dignity. You’d think a man as vilified and abused for most of his life by the white power structure would have a legitimate case for invoking the wrath of God when he and the ANC took office. But his presidency of South Africa was marked by his focus on national reconciliation.

It has never ceased to astonish me whenever I’m reminded of his gentle strength and genuine forbearance. Ninety-five years old, marked by a third of his life in prison, and he had the physical and moral uprightness of someone with the hand of God at his back.

South Africa is not without its problems. But I wonder where it would be today were it not for this amazing man who cast light wherever he found darkness?

There is a Yiddish term that is entirely appropriate to apply to Mandela: he was a mensch.

We don’t have many of them in our human history. He added grace to our lives.



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