Nelson Mandela

Nelson Mandela

Nelson Mandela was the first black president of South Africa to be elected in a fully-representative democratic election. Before his presidency, he was a prominent anti-apartheid activist and leader of the African National Congress... [more]

Nelson Mandela was the first black president of South Africa to be elected in a fully-representative democratic election. Before his presidency, he was a prominent anti-apartheid activist and leader of the African National Congress. After resorting to using guerilla factions to get his message across, the leader was deemed a terrorist and imprisoned for 27 years on Robben Island. He was released in 1990, and since then has been recognized as an international symbol of freedom, receiving hundreds of awards, including the Nobel Peace Prize

African kings, queens, chiefs to honor Mandela

Dancers clad in animal skins opened a royal ceremony Tuesday, a nod to tradition for the forward-thinking kings, queens and chiefs who jetted in to Johannesburg from across Africa to launch an institute they hope will expand their roles on the continent

The two dozen leaders from Morocco to Swaziland describe their new Institute of African Royalty as part think-tank on democracy and development, part lobby group to polish their image. They say their model is anti-apartheid icon and former President Nelson Mandela, and plan to honor the man referred to during Tuesday's proceedings as "Prince Mandela" at a gala ceremony in Pretoria, the capital, later this week.

Sello Hatang, a spokesman for the anti-apartheid icon's office, said Mandela "feels honored to be respected by the traditional leadership."

Mandela's family claims the royal chieftaincy of Mvezo, a village in southeastern South Africa, and he spent part of his childhood in the court of a tribal regent being groomed, like his father before him, to advise kings.

"My later notions of leadership were profoundly influenced by observing the regent and his court," Mandela wrote in his autobiography, describing meetings called to discuss community matters such as coping with droughts, managing cattle and responding to new laws decreed by the colonial government. "Everyone who wanted to speak did so. It was democracy in its purest form."

But as a young man, Mandela fled rural southeastern South Africa for Johannesburg to avoid a marriage arranged by the regent. During the apartheid years, Mandela clashed with his nephew, K.D. Matanzima. Matanzima collaborated with the white government to lead one of the homelands set up to deny blacks citizenship, and then ruled it like a despot.

Mandela tried to persuade Matanzima to reform, and reached out to other chiefs, even "while many of my comrades thought we should disdain those leaders."

Nkosi Phathekile Holomisa, president of the Congress of Traditional Leaders of South Africa, called Mandela the "great reconciler" between traditionalists and modernists.

"During the era of colonialism and in our case apartheid, traditional leaders found themselves entangled in the systems and machinations of colonialists," said Holomisa, a chief from eastern South Africa whose independent group has been closely linked with Mandela's African National Congress.

Holomisa said traditional leaders have hesitated to criticize Africa's postcolonial governments. But as they watched the new leaders fail to eradicate poverty and entrench democracy, the old guard began to wonder whether it might have something to offer.

Daniel Masombuka, a 36-year-old city counselor who arrived Tuesday in the entourage of his relative, the Ndbele King Makhosonke II, said the spirit of listening and finding consensus that Mandela saw in the tribal meetings of his youth needed to be revived.

Masombuka, wearing a beaded collar piece and skins, has a degree in civil engineering, and is working on a master's in public administration. He is proof traditionalists "can do some things which are progressive," he said.

So is Joyce Mogale-Lefakane, a granddaughter of a king who ruled an area stretching to the north and west of what is now Johannesburg. She said once women were expected to stay silently at home while their men attended tribal councils, but "at this present moment, we, as women, we are raising our voices."

Queen Ama Nana Amissah III from Ghana delivered one of Tuesday's main speeches, declaring: "For every successful king, there is a successful queen."

Like Queen Ama or another guest at Tuesday's event, Best Kemigisa, the queen mother of Toro in Uganda, most African royals no longer have more than ceremonial roles. The territories over which their ancestors once ruled are now incorporated into larger states, or cut by national borders.

In South Africa, the National House of Traditional Leaders was established by law in 1997 to give chiefs a formal role as advisers to the president on customary law and other issues. In Uganda, President Yoweri Museveni recently restored the traditional kingdoms his predecessor banned in 1967, but has been adamant that kings keep out of politics.

But Swazi King Mswati III, represented at Tuesday's gathering by a brother, holds most of the power in his southern African nation of just over 1 million people, resisting calls for greater democracy.

In Morocco, head of state Mohammed VI is known as a modernist. Mina Metioui, who was in Johannesburg as Mohammed's representative and whose family has advised Moroccan kings for generations, said African kings can transcend politics to give their people a sense of continuity.

"They've been born and raised to care for the countries of their ancestors," she said. "It's a tree that's been planted, and it's there for centuries."

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