Best of the Week
Most Popular
1.Get Ready for Another 2008-Style Financial Crisis - Dr_Martenson
2.The Coming Generational Storm, Living Beyond Our Children's Means and Doing Ponzi Proud - Laurence Kotlikoff and Scott Burns
3.Facebook IPO May Break the Stock Market and Initiate a Free Fall Crash - Steven_Vincent
4.Looming Reversal of Centralization as Empires Disintegrate - Gary_North
5.High Risk of Near Term Global Financial, Stock Market Crash - Steven_Vincent
6.FaceBook $100 Billion Internet IPO Emperor Has No Clothes, Investors Could Lose 85% - Nadeem_Walayat
7.The Pacific Ocean Is Dying: Special Report On Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe - T_Anthony_Michael
8.Stock Markets Remain Addicted to QE, Why We're Turning Japanese - Keith Fitz-Gerald
9.Economic Recovery Via Shared Sacrifice, Cutting Government Spending, Deficit and Debts - Lacy Hunt
10.Blue-Chip Dividend Growth Stocks Are Today’s Strong Option For Retirement Portfolios - Charles_Carnevale
Last 5 Days Analysis
JPMorgan Chase and Central Banking - 23th May 12
U.S. Housing Market Bulls vs Bears Showdown - 23th May 12
Fool Britannia - 23rd May 12
Is the World Ready for Gold Turkey? - 23rd May 12
Its The Gas, Stupid ! - 23rd May 12
Gold Bubble? Demand Data Continues To Show No Bubble - 23rd May 12
U.S. Presidential Election 2012: Forget Bailouts, We Need a Shakeout - 23rd May 12
Biotechnology Pushes the Boundaries of Life, It's Like Having a "Fountain of Youth" in a Bottle - 23rd May 12
Economic Recovery or Collapse? Bet on Collapse - Financial Crisis Could Destroy Western Civilization - 23rd May 12
Hedge Funds Re-evaluate Gold’s Potential - 23rd May 12
Gold and Silver Long-Term Trading Signal - 23rd May 12
Europe One Nation (Under Germany) - 23rd May 12
U.S. Housing Market Is Stabilizing - 23rd May 12
What Is Volume Telling Us about Gold Stocks? - 22nd May 12
Has Gold Finally Bottomed ? - 22nd May 12
Silver Presenting Excellent Risk Reward Opportunity - 22nd May 12
Stock Market Retracement Rally is Nearly Over - 22nd May 12
Mining Stocks: How Long Will the Downturn Last? - 22nd May 12
Mobile Wallet Technology: The Giant Killers in the Weeds - 22nd May 12
Swiss Parliament Examines ‘Gold Franc’ Currency Today - 22nd May 12
Australia's War Waging Strategy Despite Lack of Threats and Enemies - 22nd May 12
SPY Bounced, XLF and FXE Not So High - 22nd May 12
The People Have Spoken, Gold and Silver Markets Will Soar - 22nd May 12
Real Gold Price Holds the Cards for Gold Bullion and Gold Stocks - 22nd May 12
Gold: The World's Friend for 5,000 Years - 22nd May 12
How a Simple Line Can Improve Your Trading Success - 21st May 12
Stock, Forex and Commodity Markets Analysis and Trading Charts Setups - 21st May 12
FTSE - A rose between two thorns - MAP Analysis - 21st May 12
Full-Fledged European Bank Run Underway; Monetarist Fools are Everywhere; Believe in Gold - 21st May 12
The Pacific Ocean Is Dying: Special Report On Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe - 21st May 12
Stock Market Interim Rally Directly Ahead - 21st May 12
Are Homo Sapiens an Endangered Species? - 21st May 12
Are You Ready for Market Mayhem? - 21st May 12
Global Stock Markets Outlook Ahead - 21st May 12
Stock Market Dam Has Broken, As Massive Divergences End - 21st May 12
Gold Triple Bottom and Stocks Oversold – Now What? - 21st May 12
Dr. Frankenstein's Europe, No Easy Greece Exit, Bank Runs - 21st May 12
Stock Market Downtrend May be Ending Soon - 20th May 12
Looming Reversal of Centralization as Empires Disintegrate - 20th May 12
Phlogging Phlogiston: The Real Origins Of Global Warming Hysteria - 20th May 12
Small Cap Gold Resources Investing, An Extraordinary Time to Be in the Driver's Seat - 20th May 12
Economic Recovery Is an Illusion When Adjusted or Inflation - 20th May 12
Two Culprits in the Oil Demand-Pricing Disconnect - 20th May 12
Destroy Greece to Save the Euro as Merkel Makes 'Growth Proposals' Whilst Asking for Referendum on Euro - 20th May 12
Gold Bottom is In, But is it September 2008 or October 2008? - 19th May 12
Elites Deterrence is Dead - 19th May 12
Understanding JPM's Blunder That Cost It $2bn & Counting - 19th May 12
Is Major Decline in Gold and Silver Stocks Underway? - 19th May 12
Renewable and Non-renewable Resources Investing, An Argument for a Contrarian Investment - 19th May 12
Gold Stock Capitulation - 19th May 12

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Stock Market Short-term Forecasts - Free Access

Mandela's Contested South Africa Legacy

Politics / Africa Jul 15, 2011 - 01:14 AM

By: Danny_Schechter

Politics

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleAt 94, Nelson Mandela is still kicking, inspiring an international day of community service on July 18th in his name. This seems to be an idea that Barack Obama borrowed for similar events in the USA. 

While activists and athletes and entertainers, are honoring him by responding to his call for engagement, journalists in the obit departments of the world’s news networks are quietly, even secretly, combing their archives for footage and tributes that will air when he moves on to the next world.  They are getting ready and seem to think it will happen sooner rather than later.


I have already seen a program length obit that a major network has ready to go.

Barring some major disaster at the same time, Mandela’s death may receive more visibility than the achievements of his long life.

The question is: which Mandela will be memorialized? Will it be he leader who built a movement and a military organization to fight injustice or a man of inspiration with a great smile who we admire because of the many years he suffered behind bars?

Having spent many years as a network producer, I know that the TV News industry’s  instinct is to “humanize” the fallen by focusing on their symbolic importance.

He was a symbol of a commitment to forgiving his enemies and promoting reconciliation, a man who was cut off from his family and, in the end, lost storybook love story with Winnie Mandela after years of painful incarceration.

This approach also involves softening, celebratizing and depoliticizing a completely political person who said famously, “the struggle is my life” in the name of presenting someone who anybody can relate to, a big name to admire but not necessarily to learn from or get a balanced picture about. The idea is  that Mandela will be likeable if he is like everyone else not that it is his stature as a leader that sets him apart.

In the United States civil rights icon Martin Luther King has, in the popular media, been reduced to four words, “I have A Dream,” as if that was the sum of his thinking and the extent of his contribution. Ask any school kid about him and your will hear a recycling of those famous four words with no context or background.

In South Africa Mandela has become a demi-God, he is  seen as the man who unilaterally freed the country and who virtually walks on water. He is reated more in terms of a heroic myth than as a man who rose to an enormous challenge. He is certainly not  a mere politician.

His achievements or lack of them in office are not known while the story of how South Africa ended apartheid is reduced to the waving of his magic wand.  There was lots of media attention on pressure from the Boers, not the banks. We heard about the public demands of Chief Buthelezi’s IFP, but not the hidden pressure by the Washington dominated IMF and World Bank,

Little attention was paid to how he saw himself as an organizational man, a “loyal and disciplined” member of the African National Congress and the movements it inspired.

The accent on TV is always on top-down change by the great and the good, not the bottom-up pressure by freedom fighters at the community level who made the country ungovernable with help from armed fighters in exile, UN resolutions, economic and cultural sanctions, pressure by anti-apartheid militants the world over , and even the might of the Cuban army that defeated the South Africans in Angola. 

Media likes to personalize the story but its complexities are rarely linked together or told.

Mandela’s own trajectory of contradictions is also not fully appreciated,

He was born to a Royal family in a tribal culture and was. in his early years, an apolitical aristrocrat in South African terms who only slowly became a leader of the masses, who moved to the city to become a successful lawyer, who was initially part of an elite, a nationalist distrustful of radicals in a non-violent organization.

He was also known as a lady’s man uncertain of his direction.

But events and new friends helped transform him from a captive of the suites to a man of the streets, His law partner Oliver Tambo and the mild-mannered ANC colleague Walter Sisulu influenced his thinking. His exposure to the ravages and violence of apartheid on the lives of ordinary Africans radicalized him. He was soon working with communists and people of all races,

As a member of ANC’s Youth League, he questioned the organization’s conservatism and challenged its mass base by recognizing after massacres of his people, that they would have to fight back.

He became the leader of a group within his party committed to armed struggle, and traveled to other African states for military training. He was denounced as a terrorist but was careful to insure that that the bombs his comrades planted did not kill civilians.

In short, he became a guerrilla fighter tthat the South Africans hunted along with the CIA. In fact it was the Americans who tipped the police off on where to capture him.
There was no Julian Assange in this days to blow the whistle on their covert surveillance.

This is not a part of his history that corporate media likes to project for fear of what it could encourage. The corporates and foundations that fund his foundation prefer to treat him as an icon that everyone loves, not an agitator that the establishment hated.

His years in prison turned him into a non-person. He could not be quoted in South Africa and his picture could not be shown. The South Africans not only incarcerated him in their most remote and brutal dungeon, but they insured that he disappeared from public view.

Despite the isolation, he was not forgotten, organizing the men around him into a unit of resistance, and politically educating younger captives in what was called Mandela University.  He and his comrades did not let themselves or the growing ranks of their fellow priosners get discouraged. They stressed discipline to combat despair.

As one former inmate on “The Island,” told me, “We became prisoners of hope.”

How they did this, how he co-opted and befriended prison guards by speaking their language and finding out about their families, weakened their hostility and violence. He was always very strategic. He learned to contain his anger and not succumb to hatred to insure survival.

Sure, he was lonely, but who in prison isn’t?

He was so successful that, at one point, one of the prison chiefs asked him, “Mr. Mandela, may I have my prison back?”

As he mounted a protracted personal battle, he went inside, often hiding his personal feelings and vulnerabilities. He realized he was a role model and acted the part.

On the outside, his comrades decided to turn him into a poster boy, to project him as the symbol of their struggle. The demand to “free all political prisoners” was replaced with the demand to Free Mandela.” He was an easier to market brand that way, and quickly became the focus of media attention. Soon, there were songs, concerts, TV documentaries and marches.

 He became the best-known prisoner in the world.

As the world discovered his courage, South Africa had to take him more seriously as well after the regime was flooded him from people worldwide of all walks of life.
with demands to release him.

He was a risk taker--- from his vow that he “was prepared to die”—a strident view his lawyers counseled against--- to his willingness to talk with his enemies even as his personal pre-negotiating initiative bypassed his organization and worried many of its members.

He had guts as well as charm.  His stoicism and patience were legendary. He acted thoughtfully and leveraged his visibility to help his comrades who he insisted be released before him.  He never lost his political focus.

All of his utterances seemed profound to his growing ranks of followers even if they weren’t.

He went on to make deals with Apartheid leaders, to blast his negotiating partner F.W. DeKlerk and then embrace him. He helped organize the country’s first democratic election and didn’t just run in it. All parties were welcome.

He consciously built alliances across racial, political and tribal lines. He made compromises of his own principles in the name of avoiding a bloody civil war or reviving the economy.

He then stepped down after one term, a rarity in Africa,  He recognized the scourge of AIDS early on when some his colleagues wouldn’t.

This was his genius. It is a story of great passion and perseverance over decades. It’s the story behind his “long walk to freedom” 

His love life, problems with his wife and his children and grandchildren my pull at our heart strings, but they are not as important as the epic battles he led against injustice and for freedom,

After his death, this fight for freedom that inspired the world that deserves telling but which story do you think the networks will tell? 

Will they present him as victim or victor, as a flawed person, as he sees himself—or as a saint cleaned up and repackaged for mass consumption?

Will they give us the Hollywood one-dimensional picture of the soft and endearing gentle giant that turns him into a grandfatherly cuddly bear or the real saga of a liberation leader that won against the odds?

Which Narrative will prevail?

News Dissector Danny Schechters film and book Disinformation. For more information, Http://www.plunderhecrimeofourtime.com.

    News Dissector Danny Schechter has made a film and written a book on the “Crime Of Our Time.” (News Dissector.com/plunder.) Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org

    © 2011 Copyright Danny Schechter - All Rights Reserved
    Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors


© 2005-2012 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




Commenting Issue - If on submitting you are returned to the main Index Page (50% chance) then your comment has not been accepted, Follow below steps for 95% chance of comment being accepted.

  1. Click your browser Back button (from main index page).
  2. COPY your comment text from Comment box (i.e. copy to clipboard).
  3. Press PAGE Refresh - You should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation"
  4. Paste your comment back into the comment text box.
  5. Click Submit - If everything goes okay you will remain on the article page with the message "Your comment was held for moderation and will be reviewed shortly".
  6. If instead you are again returned to the main index page then repeat 1-5, alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book