“Now to him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us” (Ephesians 3:20 – King James Version) My genuine hope and primary purpose for the Ephesians 3:20 Faith Encouragement and Empowerment Blog is to assist all people of faith, regardless of your prism of experience, to grow spiritually toward unconditional self-acceptance and develop personally acquiring progressive integrity of belief and lifestyle. I pray you will discover your unique purpose in life. I further pray love, joy, peace, happiness and unreserved self-acceptance will be your constant companions. Practically speaking, this blog will help you see the proverbial glass in life as always half full rather than half empty. I desire you become an eternal optimist who truly believes that Almighty God can do anything that you ask or imagine.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Celebrating the Extraordinary Life of Nelson Mandela and The People's Struggle in South Africa - Part One

Celebrating the Extraordinary Life of Nelson Mandela and
The People’s Struggle in South Africa

“Albeit an extraordinary human, Nelson Mandela [was] a human being nonetheless.”  One of Mr. Mandela’s daughters reputedly offered those sober words in response to an inquiry regarding her impressions of the recently released movie, A Long Walk to Freedom, depicting the life of her much beloved and venerated father.  She further suggested the necessity of viewing the film in silence and solitude to allow her to grapple honestly with the contrast between the heroic and mythological figure of late twentieth century international relations and her very human father who was as susceptible to mistakes, error, temptation and fear as any other person.  Mandela’s daughter’s insistence upon a balanced assessment of her father’s life and legacy predicts the forthcoming judgment of history.  Within the next quarter of a century and beyond, the post-apartheid gloss and grandiloquent characterizations of historical heroes will yield to the hard, realistic and sober analysis of history.  Future generations throughout the world and Black South Africans specifically will assess Mr. Mandela’s legacy and share their perspective of its successes and failures. 

Contemporarily, with praise and thanksgiving to Almighty God, I celebrate his inspiration for his nation and the world.  Among the countless lessons he taught us upon his release from twenty-seven years of unjust imprisonment are the importance of forgiveness and the necessity of forsaking bitterness and revenge.  Though he forgave his oppressors, he rightly insisted upon truth, dignity, honor and respect as conditions and means of achieving reconciliation.  History’s future judgment will determine if his decisions as the first duly and democratically elected Black President of the Republic of South Africa were merely symbolic yet profound and enduring or whether his governance actually laid an economic, political and social foundation and infrastructure to enable future generations of Black South Africans to actualize their individual and collective potential.  Nevertheless, history will forever vindicate Mr. Mandela and countless and nameless millions of his people for their commitment to a vision of country free of rabid and reprehensible apartheid.  As we celebrate his extraordinary life and legacy, we do as justly as we simultaneously honor and commemorate the anonymous persons who literally gave their lives for a free South Africa.

Wholeheartedly, I suggest we discard Carlyle’s “great man of history” thesis as we rightly celebrate Mr. Mandela’s contributions to ending apartheid and building a post-apartheid South Africa.  I suggest we temper grandiose characterizations of his role in the people’s struggle for justice and freedom.  Due veneration for his heartfelt commitment to the liberation of his people does not necessitate concretizing a mythic personality who accomplished grand deeds with unusual foresight and superhuman motives.  The people’s struggle is always greater than any one individual.  Admittedly, the confluence of historical and contemporary circumstances catapults a person to leadership and celebrity.  Yet, it is generations of Black South Africans who painstakingly walk toward freedom with great sacrifice to their marriages, families, livelihood and physical lives comprise the movement to end apartheid and create a brighter future for their posterity.  As we appropriately honor Mr. Mandela’s seminal role without yielding to the sentimentality and meaningless grandiloquent descriptions, we equally celebrate each past, present and future person who gave, sacrifices and expands this just cause.

We cannot allow contemporary and historical grandeur to overshadow the continual struggle which Black South Africans face.  The HIV/AIDS epidemic equates with genocide.  Western and multinational pharmaceutical companies have a moral and ethical obligation to utilize their resources and philanthropy to retard the devastation this disease reeks daily upon South Africa.  Literally hundreds of thousands of children are orphans as both parents have died because of HIV/AIDS.  It is not possible to estimate the long-term effect upon the nation’s gross national product, familial and social structures, governance, education systems and participation in the global village.  Many South Africans still reside in shanty towns and other forms of entrenched poverty.  They deserve the development of public and affordable housing, public education, healthcare, job training for the twenty-first century, civil and human rights and access to the arts parallel to the New Deal programs of the Roosevelt Administration and the Great Society and War on Poverty programs of the Johnson Administration.  Expansion of national infrastructure inclusive of replacing shanty towns with the equivalent of Habitat For Humanity homes and extending public utilities and medical clinics to impoverished, disenfranchised and economically disadvantaged Black South Africans are concrete and practical means of celebrating Mr. Mandela’s legacy.  Conceivably, his vision of a post-apartheid South Africa necessitated the distribution of economic, governmental and other social resources in a just and equitable manner thereby offering human dignity and respect to each citizen.  I posit celebrations of his life justly ask the nations of the world that benefited handsomely from investments in the apartheid regime which exploited immeasurably Black South African workers to return and reinvest in a new and free Republic of South Africa.


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