Thursday, January 02, 2014

Madiba: Man Of The Year

Man Of The Year, Madiba

Written by Eluem Emeka Izeze
Nigerian Guardian

ONCE in a long while, a bright star shines through the gloom and despondency of our world. It points us to the inevitable fact that all of humanity is not lost to the bad, the ugly and the terrible. It shows us that life is more than the pursuit of unedifying, if temporarily satisfying pandering to power, wealth and fame. Suddenly, we see virtues of service, sacrifice, self-denial, that are now much in decline. We are thrust into the full glow of exemplary living, of having nothing and yet possessing everything. And we quickly embrace and own the moment.

Quite fittingly, the whole world scrambled to own, in death, the man Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela. His funeral the other day, became the biggest congregation ever of the high and mighty, the good and great, friends and foes, and numerous ordinary folks. In death as in life, he towered above all. He who conquered hatred, brought malicious enemies to a warm handshake. He who disavowed power, commanded the widest acclaim in the world’s recent history.

For once, the world genuinely seemed to be mourning a true giant of a man. The world saw cherished virtues in an otherwise imperfect man. His voice of reason, temperance and gentle rebuke resonated far and wide. But now it is gone. In the end, Africa’s most famous son had inadvertently adopted sons and daughters of all colours, and races and dispositions. No wonder the whole world mourned as one that has lost a father.

It was sufficient to alter traditions. And Mandela, the one affectionately called Madiba, altered traditions for this newspaper. For the first time, The Guardian is today, posthumously conferring the Man of the Year 2013 on Nelson Mandela, a man who dominated the world even as an ordinary citizen, who spoke truth to power across board, who did not simply set Azania free, but taught the world that man, any man, still has redeeming features. His enchanting story is told by Dr. Tony Okeregbe, a member of our editorial board.

Eluem Emeka Izeze
Managing Director


Mandela: The ideal lives on

By Tony Okeregbe

IN his lifetime Nelson Mandela knew how to take a walk. From the scenic and bucolic pastures of Thembuland in Cape province to the Union Building in Pretoria, Mandela’s walk to freedom must have indeed been very long. But death chose another path: as in Greek mythology, it gave him a leap to immortality – turning him into an irreducible abstract entity for posterity to contemplate.

For Desmond Tutu, Mandela represented tolerance; in the contemplation of United States’ Barak Obama, he was a giant of history; a personification of forgiveness in the mind of Ghana’s Dramani Mahama. And for the whole world, he was an all-knowing father, the wisest presence in a world in search of reconciliation, unification and freedom. These attributes and more make up the idea called Mandela. For being such an uncommon person for becoming an idea that now lives and an ideal that humanity now aspires to live by, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela remains immortal and is The Guardian’s Person of the Year.

Towering larger than life even in death, Mandela left behind maxims and ways of life that have become a philosophy uniting people of diverse views, cultures, beliefs and religions. Notwithstanding his middle name, Rolihlahla, which in his native Xhosa tongue colloquially translates as ‘trouble maker’, Mandela was a racial and ideological bridge-builder, who found welcome in the multifarious divides of the human community. In an effortless and meek manner, he united opposites, reiterating man’s ancestral commonness and existential predicament as the prime factors in understanding our shared world.

An outstanding virtue that brought this to life was Mandela’s exemplification of forgiveness. Despite the dehumanization and personal hurt he endured from his oppressors, a balanced state of affairs would have necessitated a revenge of equal brutality and racial rage against the white minority. But Mandela’s prison of purgation entailed a never-ending chastisement of his anger, so much so that he shocked the world with these words: “To go to prison because of your convictions and be prepared to suffer for what you believe in, is something worthwhile. It is an achievement for a man to do his duty on earth irrespective of the consequences.”

By this heroic gesture Mandela became an icon of hope and healing, who demonstrated that peace could be a vehicle of reconciliation, unification and true liberation of not only the African people, but also of any community that had been constrained to existential periphery by colonialism, hate and internal strife.

Just as in forgiveness, Mandela represented a godliness devoid of the bigotry and parochialism evident in today’s partisan religiosity. The Dalai Lama, was once quoted to have said that tolerance is a virtue you learn from your enemies. Amidst the purifying furnace of racial subjugation, political disenfranchisement, economic deprivation, systemic dehumanization, all culminating in the 27 years of incarceration, Mandela became a new meaning of tolerance. In an age burdened by heightened relativism and celebration of difference, Mandela as tolerance, is no longer a patient or painful forbearance of the other, but rather a catholicity of spirit, whereby the heart and mind reach out to the other in psychic exchange, through open-mindedness, sharing, genuine willingness to learn.

Such a spirit is unbridled by religious partisanship; it is ideologically non-divisive and socio-economically fair-minded. In existential terms, this Mandelan spirit is an idea cast by what some scholars have termed colour-blindness vision. Politically, this depicts an ideology of the state belonging equally to different people, nations, and tribes – Afrikaans, English, Zulu, Mandela elevated this political category into a philosophy that envisions consistent habituation of openness to the enemy.

This Mandelan idea is a veritable pointer to the possibility of a just and genuinely humane world, where a person’s inalienable rights, intrinsic worth and inviolability are respected. At the twilight of his life, when time had purified his experiences into an embodiment of noble qualities, words were no longer necessary for him to pass on any message. To the forlorn and hopeless, the toothy smile emblazoned on his placid weather-beaten face radiated hope; to the confused and searching soul, his life was a Holy Writ. In a terrorized world, when bombs, bullets and hate-words form the instruments of proselytization, Mandela typifies the idea preaching truth without words.

While the totality of Mandela’s being has crystallized into an idea, Mandela himself did not relish the air-splitting pedanticism of professional ideologues; neither was he an armchair theoretician that reveled in sophistry and grandiloquence. Every idea was given life in words, materializing through a dialectical process of argumentation and counter-argumentation. Every word, in turn, was matched with action. In a world ruled by inefficacious knowledge-power, Mandela showed and demonstrated the power of ideas and action, by carving action into the state superstructure. By this, he verily relived the words of social theorist Ludwig Feuerbach: “Do not wish to be a philosopher in contrast to being a man… do not think as a thinker … think as a living, real being … think in existence”.

It was by thinking in existence that Mandela redeems the freedom of the African. If the African has to be, he has to do that in a shared world. And to live freely in a shared world, he has to forgive, reconcile, unify with and tolerate the other. To nurture the ANC’s political ideology of African nationalism, Mandela opened his mind and heart to the edifying influences of great philosophers and social exemplars of left-wing persuasion, even though he prided himself a democrat. From Karl Marx’s dialectical materialism and scientific socialism he drew insights that fanned his sympathy for nationalization of state assets and equal distribution of wealth, as well as opposition to capitalism, private land-ownership and money- power. In the anti-colonialist thinking of former Indian Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, Mandela saw a motivation for his march of struggle. From Mohandas Gandhi, a man for whom Mandela had profound respect, Mandela adopted the non-violent resistance as a pragmatic approach to protest mobilization.

This existential philosophy of being-with-others is also instructive in understanding Mandela’s economic philosophy. Both during his Apartheid and post-Apartheid leadership, Mandela was completely pragmatic in its views of material means, and accepted succour and aid wherever it came from including Libya (as an aside, in line with the unifying philosophy one of Mandela’s grandchild was baptized Gadaffi). Amazing that though the ANC (Mandela’s party) financial dependence grew, their ideology was totally independent.

Again, this existentialist and humanist streak comes to relief in his interrogation of rationality. What is rationality? How can man justify his rationality? Should rationality conjure ideas of acrimony, division and lopsided power relations? Rationality does not exist as an instrument of subjugation and oppression in the hands of professional thinkers; it is not a faculty to be deployed for the service of the powerful in society against the weak and disadvantaged. Just as it has facilitated advances in science and technology, Mandela was paraphrased to have said, rationality should orientate man towards eliminating conflict and suffering, especially of the disadvantaged in society. In this way his life was an open book on humanism.

There is a trend in these maxims of forgiveness, reconciliation, tolerance and economic liberation (accepting aid wherever it came from). This last maxim depicts the Africanness of the Mandelan Idea as captured by the ancient Bantu adage Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu, meaning ‘We are people through other people’. This maxim was often said to be a guiding principle close to Mandela’s heart as seen in this quote: “For to be free is not merely to cast off one’s chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others.”

The reasoning here is that, if one forgave the other, he should be able to reconcile with him. If he reconciled with the other, he should be able to tolerate him. And if he could tolerate him he should be able to accept his gift, and share from his bounty. This principle of wholesome acceptability is devoid of the bickering or animosity that characterizes the global ‘aid economy’. In the same vein, it does not foist the political or ideological whims of the donor on the aid seeker. And this is what freedom means; this is what Mandela’s life in totality stands for.

• Tony Okeregbe, PhD,

member, Editorial Board.

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