jane
You never know, maybe some of them learnt something that day.
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The Foreign Office has requested that all flags are flown at half mast. You'll know why, and if I had a flag I'd be flying it at half mast today.
But WHY does the FO think it needs to ask? Nanny statism gone mad. Scowl.
As a balance to that, I loved seeing a tweet which showed a photograph of voting queues in the South African presidential elections. Awesome. People who haden't had freedoms we take for granted appreciated the freedom to vote deomcratically.
But I still managed to have a grumpy thought, which was: "Stick that in your pipe Russell Brand."
Well, I did warn you 
jane
You never know, maybe some of them learnt something that day.
That absolute dickhead ex Tory MP Terry Dicks is on C4 news - why are they giving him airtime ? I've served on a committee with him and he is living proof that there is no IQ low enough to prevent someone becoming an MP ( pace Boris). On and on about the ANC being a terrorist organisation - I wonder what that makes the South African Security Service who sent the parcel bomb to Ruth First and threw Steve Biko out of the window?
Well C4 news you have reminded me ( if I needed it) why I absolutely detest Thatcher and always will
Well there's a blast from the past Terry Dickhead .... just goes to show that no-one else was willing to defend their actions of that time ... talk about scraping the barrel.
Come to think of it, I rather respect him for at least having the courage of his convictions .... unlike Cameron et al who claim to have seen the light.
You are too kind River - he is just thick and doesn't understand what he's saying
But I agree the others are gutless
Isn't gutless and spineless a pre-requisite for most politicians. There are of course notable exceptions such as Paddy Ashdown but generally many of the self serving yes men & women have much to be ashamed of but never show their shame. I wonder how many would be so keen to join the gravy train if their ill thought out co*k ups were not funded with our money but their own.
As for democracy - I guess it can be defined as being given the opportunity to vote on what we are told will be happening and if we don't get it right we just keep voting until we do. Perhaps I am just a grumpy old cynic - or not!
The ANC did have a military wing that committed terrorist acts.
BTW, I've never heard of Terry Dicks and I know nothing about what he has said today. My statement is just a simple one of historical fact.
The ANC planned and carried out acts of sabotage on infrastructure features like bridges and power stations. They did not aim to take human life, but to disrupt the working of the country. Amnesty International would never categorise Nelson Mandela and his colleagues as prisoners of conscience, although Winnie, under house arrest, was a POC. Ironically, she was the one that subsequently encouraged acts of violence by her notorious 'football team'.
This article by Salil Tripathi would seem to suggest otherwise in the response to the Afrikaans "one Kaffir one bullet".
I've a couple more interesting article still to read.
But so did the French resistance
And they are never called terrorists but heroes
Tyre necklacing?
Here is how Tripathi describes Mandela's greatness after his imprisonment:
"And yet Mandela’s lasting gift was his power of forgiveness and lack of bitterness. He showed exceptional humanity and magnanimity when he left his bitterness behind, on the hard, white limestone rocks of Robben Island that he was forced to break for years, the harsh reflected glare of those rocks causing permanent damage to his eyes. And yet, he came out, his fist raised, smiling, and he wrote in his memoir, Long Walk To Freedom, that unless he left his bitterness and hatred behind, “I would still be in prison.”
By refusing to seek revenge, by accepting the white South African as his brother, by agreeing to build a nation with people who wanted to see him dead, Mandela rose to a stature that is almost unparalleled."
Salil Tripathi
French resistance tar and feathering? Bad things happen in just circumstances- what else was going to bring about change? You simply cannot reason with people who support apartheid
Nobody is trying to.
Trade and sports sanctions worked. It took a long time but it did work. Better than violence against things or people. Mandela recognised that.
When your post made me really sad with its narrow view. In 1964 I was an Afrikaner schoolgirl, desperately trying to fit in to the English academic class where I had been placed in high school. My family did not have servants, we couldn't afford them. Some of my wealthy English friends did, and it was at one of their homes where I first heard a servant being summoned by the ringing of a little bell that was kept on the table, to come and clear away the dishes.
Not all Afrikaans people supported Apartheid. The leader of the opposition party for many years was the highly respected Frederik van Zyl Slabbert, and he led breakthrough groups who set out to meet with other African leaders on the continent long before the ANC was unbanned. The Rupert family -wine magnates - together with other business leaders, used their influence to put pressure on the Government of the time.
Nelson Mandela loved the Afrikaners, and called them the true White tribe of Africa. He spoke flawless and beautiful Afrikaans. The Afrikaans speaking jailor who had been by his side throughout most of the long prison years, remained close to him, they had learnt much from each other. I can't remember his name now, but he was a guest of honour at the Presidential inauguration at Mandela's insistence. Zelda La Grange, a young secretary, had worked in the Presidential office for years and prepared herself to be sacked when Mandela came to office. She told of her amazement when he literally said to her "Where do you think you are going?" in perfect Afrikaans on his first day. She became his personal assistant and never left his side, and stayed with him after his retirement. Here's a youtube video, put the mute button on, because it's in Afrikaans (or 'kitchen Dutch' as I've heard it being described).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ONkyb_P8wU
I guess what I'm trying to say, so early in the morning, is that luckily for many of us the world moved on since 1964.
gk I didn't need to put the mute button on because the stills photography spoke volumes. Thanks for link.
Don't you have memories triggered by certain sounds and images that remind you of the past, grannyknot? As a 16 year old, my keen sense of fairness was challenged when I heard a white family boast of their treatment of black servants, and it was their ignorance about equality that saddened and angered me. That memory is evoked when I hear an Afrikaans accent, but I don't act on it. I recognise it what for what it is, and I am glad that there were others like me who opposed apartheid in South Africa and joined Mandela in changing the regime.
Sounds ...e.g. accents? No, not really.
Thank you Grannyknot for such an informative and enlightening post and the link.
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