Google – AFP, Justine Gerardy (AFP), 19 June 2013
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Mandla
Mandela arrives at Parliament for the State of the Nation Speech
on February
10, 2011, in Cape Town (AFP/File, Rodger Bosch)
|
MVEZO, South Africa — Nelson Mandela's grandson Mandla wanted to be a disc jockey but his illustrious grandfather had other ideas for him -- passing down a lesson on the responsibility that South Africa's most famous surname carries.
The
anti-apartheid hero chose his 38-year-old grandson as the first Mandela in
decades to be chief of his rural birthplace Mvezo in the Eastern Cape six years
ago.
"My
grandfather has always been my role model. He's an inspiration to the work I do
today," Mandela, whose father was Makgatho from the hero's first marriage,
told AFP.
As his
94-year-old grandfather battles a lung infection in hospital, he admitted it
had "not at all" been easy trying to match up to the man who became
South Africa's first black president.
"He's
a global icon but I feel that as members of the family, the small things that
we do as individuals, as a collective can one day amount to the dynamic person
my grandfather became," he said.
"South
Africa, and even the Mandelas themselves, I believe will never produce another
Nelson Mandela but we can always strive to embrace him, his principles and
values."
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A picture
taken on June 16, 2013 shows
Mandla Mandela (3rd L) kneeling down
to talk to a
girl from the village of Mvezo
(AFP/file, Jennifer Bruce)
|
There is no
clean drinking water or sanitation in the village's humble homes, many built of
mud, or even a health clinic.
Born here
in 1918, Mandela's father was stripped of the Mvezo chieftancy by a colonial
magistrate and he spent his early years in nearby Qunu village.
"We
are very much as a family intrigued as to the place he comes from, how he
emerged and the dynamic person that he became," said Mandela.
"And I
think for future generations of the Mandelas, we should always look to our
place of our origin and draw strength from that."
While
Mandela was serving a 27-year jail term, his grandson was born in Soweto, a
flashpoint of the anti-apartheid struggle far from the rural hinterland where
his grandfather was born.
As a music
loving high-schooler, he dreamed of becoming a DJ.
Mandela's
response? "Nonsense, no Mandela will ever become such. You need to go out
and find a career," he enacted, mimicking his grandfather's waving finger.
"My
grandfather has really been the driver behind the person that I needed to be
and the anchor around that was education," he said.
"He's
always believed that education is a weapon which one could utilise to change
the world so he ensured that we got a good education so that we could be of
service to the people."
On his
grandfather's wishes, he stopped working to study further in his 20s in the
Eastern Cape.
At the
time, he had two businesses and diplomas in business management and marketing
under his belt. But his grandfather had other plans for him.
He also
spent time in Qunu -- where his grandfather built a house on his prison release
-- which opened his eyes to the poverty stalking rural South Africans.
"Upon
my graduation my grandfather said 'so are you still that eager businessman you
wanted to be?'. With his sense of humour, he had seen that I had changed and I
had become more community driven," said Mandela.
"And
that's the lesson learned from my grandfather: that Mandelas are supposed to
ensure that they are of service to our people and I've taken that role,
starting here in Mvezo."
But the
village "has just been an opening of the doors", he says, having
followed his grandfather into politics.
He joined
parliament in 2009 for the ruling African National Congress, which his
grandfather led into power, a move he initially resisted.
"Again
I sought my grandfather's advice and he said to me how you're not only working
for your community which is our inheritance, that of Mvezo, but you are able to
work with the broader society."
Mandla
Mandela's time as chief has not been without controversy.
His three
marriages have fuelled headlines of bigamy, outstanding maintenance payments,
and child paternity questions, amid a land dispute and the exhumation of Qunu
family graves for reburial in Mvezo.
Under him,
signs of change include a new brick-paved road which has transformed the
journey to the village.
A museum --
currently comprising a tiny outdoor display -- is being extended in an
impressive complex with the offices of the traditional council and a conference
centre.
A science
and technology school, the village's first high school, is also under
construction and tourist accommodation is also on the cards
Mandela believes
that his grandfather's style of collective leadership was shaped by his rural
beginnings, in Mvezo and elsewhere, where he learned some of his earliest
lessons.
"It's
the birthplace of my grandfather and this is where people will always want to
come and visit, because it has a rich significance. There is no other
birthplace except Mvezo," he said.


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