Mandela at Sunset.

AuthorMeldrum, Andrew
PositionEssay

An awe-inspiring array of senior world leaders assembled on a Johannesburg stage on July 18, including Jimmy Carter, Desmond Tutu, Kofi Annan, and former Irish President Mary Robinson. Also present were British airline mogul Richard Branson and rock star Peter Gabriel.

All turned with rapt attention as a tall, frail, white-haired man shuffled onstage with a cane: Nelson Mandela.

Soon all the leaders, as well as scores of journalists, joined in a rousing chorus of "Happy Birthday" to mark Mandela's eighty-ninth year. Characteristically, Mandela used the occasion to unveil an innovative group called the Elders, which pledged to work to solve the world's most intractable problems.

Speaking in a soft voice, Mandela described his vision of what the group should do. "Together we will work to support courage where there is fear, foster agreement where there is conflict, and inspire hope where there is despair," Mandela said.

The stirring words were made all the more poignant by the sight of the fragile Mandela, sporting one of the brightly patterned shirts that have become his hallmark.

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"I am trying to take my retirement seriously," he joked, "therefore, I will not be able to participate in the really exciting part of the work: analyzing problems and seeking answers, trying to shed light into some of the darkness that afflicts our world."

As applause greeted his short speech, he walked from the podium with difficulty and sat down slowly, assisted by his wife, Graa Machel, and Carter.

T o see Mandela alert and engaged but feeble is to come to the inescapable realization that he is nearing the end of his life. International news agencies are keenly aware of Mandela's mortality. Television networks have prepared tributes, hired expert commentators, and set up satellite dishes atop Johannesburg skyscrapers to broadcast the news when Mandela dies.

His life is the stuff of legend.

The journey from rural South Africa to Johannesburg.

The defiant anti-apartheid lawyer who launched the ANC's armed, but principled, struggle against racial discrimination.

The stirring speaker whose words inspired a nation.

The man imprisoned for twenty-seven years who was such a threat to apartheid that even his image and his words were banned.

The icon who emerged from prison without bitterness and who astutely negotiated to bring his country to democracy and led the way in forgiveness and reconciliation.

The esteemed statesman who spoke out against...

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