Showing posts with label Nelson Mandela Lung Infection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nelson Mandela Lung Infection. Show all posts

Friday, December 6, 2013

The shirts, the humor, the empathy -- the magic of Mandela


JOHANNESBURG - South Africans called it the "Madiba magic" after his clan name -- Nelson Mandela's quirky mix of grandeur and simplicity, his ready quips, his ability to relate to the poor, his colorful custom-made shirts and his dancing prowess.

Mandela -- who succumbed to a recurrent lung infection on Thursday aged 95 -- drew politicians from around the world, as well as ordinary children and adults keen to get a glimpse of the freedom icon who spent 27 years in prison.

Many remember his solemn inauguration as South Africa's first black president on May 20, 1994 at the age of 75, when he shuffled a few steps in perfect time despite the wear and tear on his body, fists clenched, with a beaming smile. The now famous "Madiba jive" was born.

Entertainers parodied it, radio stations took up the beat, and every time Mandela made a public appearance someone would ask him to jive despite his increasing frailty over the years.

Parodied too, in many bars in South Africa, was his distinctive accent -- a slow, punctuated growl.

Indissolubly associated with the Madiba magic were his loose shirts -- riots of color which stood out among the sober suits and ties of his associates.

They were inspired by the shirts worn by former president Suharto of Indonesia, and hand-made for him by a Burkina Faso national living in Ivory Coast.

The photographers loved them, even though they were forbidden to use flash when taking pictures of Mandela because his eyes had been weakened when working in the glare of a limestone quarry on Robben Island, off Cape Town, where he was imprisoned for 18 years.

Thabo Mbeki, his successor as president who wore elegantly tailored dark suits, once described the shirts as "bizarre".

The Madiba magic drew politicians from around the world, eager to be photographed alongside him long after he retired in 1999.

But when US President George W. Bush visited South Africa in 2003 he passed up the chance, after Mandela criticised the invasion of Iraq in stinging terms, describing Bush as "a president who can't think properly".

The children of South Africa adored Madiba, who had a special empathy with youngsters as he missed seeing his own grow up while in apartheid prisons.

In 2002, when he gave his annual Christmas party for children in his home village of Qunu in the impoverished southeast, more than 20,000 children turned up -- some trekking for two or three days -- and pandemonium erupted.

Thousands of children and adults stampeded, with three needing hospital treatment, and security men had to cut down fences to prevent kids from being crushed.

American talk-show hostess Oprah Winfrey was present, carrying thousands of black dolls for the girls and soccer balls for the boys.

Her security detail swung into action and assisted in moving many of the children out of harm's way.

Mandela's empathy for individuals often came at the most unlikely moments.

He once interrupted a meeting to ask after the health of a heavily pregnant journalist, tapping her swollen belly gently with his big boxer's hands and asking her when the baby was due.

He was also adept at poking fun at himself, saying in 2000: "My bosses always say that I have had 27 years in prison to loaf. It is now time to do some catching up".

In 1998, he declared: "My greatest regret in life is that I never became the heavyweight boxing champion of the world".

And when South Africa narrowly lost its bid for the 2006 World soccer cup he said: "At least we have the right to get drunk... next time we will win". He was right.

Roelf Meyer, one of the apartheid regime's negotiators on the transition to democracy, said his eyes opened to Mandela's charisma shortly after his liberation from jail in 1990 when dozens of young white soldiers queued up to shake the hand of the former "terrorist".

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, July 18, 2013

'Improving' Mandela turns 95 in hospital


PRETORIA - Millions of people around the world marked Nelson Mandela's 95th birthday Thursday, heartened by news that the hospitalized icon was now able to smile and nod to visitors.

After six weeks of intensive hospital treatment, Ndileka Mandela told AFP her grandfather was "steadily improving" and "using his eyes, nodding."

That message was echoed by President Jacob Zuma who visited his predecessor's Pretoria bedside "found him really stable and I was able to say 'happy birthday' and he was able to smile."

That is a dramatic turnaround for the ailing peace icon, who just weeks ago was thought to be close to death.

Mandela was rushed to hospital on June 8 with a recurring lung infection that had already put him in hospital three times in less than a year.

Outside the Pretoria facility which has been the focal point of a national vigil for the last 41 days, there were joyous scenes.

Revellers sang anti-apartheid struggle songs, school children read poems dedicated to a man nearing the end of his long walk that took him from political prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

"Tata (father) Mandela has once again proved that he is a fighter," said well-wisher Agnes Shilowane, a local university student.

Thursday's news was a relief elsewhere in the country to South Africans who marked Mandela Day with a panoply of good deeds.

Biker gangs cleaned streets, volunteers painted schools and politicians spent 67 minutes on worthy projects -- all to mark Mandela's 67 years of public service.

Near Pretoria, Zuma tried to channel Mandela's cross-community appeal by delivering government housing to poor whites.

Messages of support also poured in from around the world -- and even from astronauts on the International Space Station -- to mark the anniversary, which many eared Mandela would not live to see.

US President Barack Obama -- who was unable to visit Mandela during a trip to South Africa last month -- led tributes to the peace icon, calling on people to honour him through volunteer work.

"Our family was deeply moved by our visit to Madiba's former cell on Robben Island during our recent trip," Obama said in a statement.

"We will forever draw strength and inspiration from his extraordinary example of moral courage, kindness, and humility."

Other well-wishers included the Dalai Lama, former US president Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary, US actor Morgan Freeman and Mandela's former jailer FW de Klerk, who went on to share the Nobel Peace Prize with him.

"Mandela's place in South Africa's history is assured," former president De Klerk said in a statement.

"His legacy of courage, perseverance and magnanimity will continue to inspire us -- and people throughout the world -- for generations to come."

'Oxtail and dumplings'

The Mandela family also did their bit, with his grandchildren volunteering at a children's home.

They were then expected to gather at the hospital for lunch, along with Mandela's third wife Graca Machel, who also celebrates 15 years of marriage to her husband today.

"We're doing our 67 minutes and bringing our old clothes that we're not using anymore. Then we'll converge at the hospital to have lunch with granddad," said Mandela's granddaughter Ndileka said.

She said the birthday meal would include Mandela's favourite food, including "oxtail, prawns, dumplings and vegetables".

Another granddaughter, Zaziwe Dlamini-Manaway, distributed food at a school.

"I think it's important for us to give back," she said.

"We are a family, we hope for him to come home, and we know the whole nation would hope the same thing, and the whole world."

The United Nations declared the Nobel Peace laureate's birthday Mandela Day in 2010, but for many this year it takes on extra poignancy.

In central Lisbon the Don Pedro IV Square was to be renamed Nelson Mandela Square, and an open-air Mandela-themed opera concert was planned in Paris.

On Saturday, the Australian city of Melbourne will hold a concert featuring local and African artists.

Born on July 18, 1918, Mandela fought against white rule in South Africa as a young lawyer and was convicted of treason in 1964.

He spent the next 27 years in jail.

It was in part through his willingness to forgive his white jailers that Mandela made his indelible mark on history.

After negotiating an end to apartheid, he became South Africa's first black president, drawing a line under centuries of colonial and racist suppression.

He then led reconciliation in the deeply divided country.

But the sunset of Mandela's life has been somewhat eclipsed by bitter infighting among his relatives.

A row over his final resting place has seen three of his children's graves dug up and their remains moved amid public brawling and legal action among his children and grandchildren.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Nelson Mandela back in hospital with lung infection


Former South African president Nelson Mandela has been readmitted to hospital with a recurrent lung infection, the presidency said Thursday.



The 94-year-old was hospitalized "due to the recurrence of his lung infection" just before midnight on Wednesday, President Jacob Zuma's office said in a statement.

It is the second time this month that the anti-apartheid hero has spent the night in hospital and follows a nearly three-week stay in December for the lung infection and for surgery to extract gallstones.

Earlier this month, he spent a night in hospital for a "scheduled medical checkup".

"Doctors are attending to him, ensuring that he has the best possible expert medical treatment and comfort," said the presidency.

Zuma wished "Madiba", as he is fondly known in South Africa, a quick recovery.

"We appeal to the people of South Africa and the world to pray for our beloved Madiba and his family and to keep them in their thoughts," he said.

"We have full confidence in the medical team and know that they will do everything possible to ensure recovery."
The name or location of the hospital was not provided.

Mandela has had several health scares over the years.

In early 2012, he was admitted for a minor exploratory procedure to investigate persistent abdominal pain.

In 2011, he was hospitalized for two nights for an unnamed acute respiratory infection.

The Nobel Peace Prize winner diagnosed with early stage tuberculosis in 1988 while serving a 27-year jail term during apartheid.

source: abs-cbnnews.com