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Mandela Page 86

by Anthony Sampson

English)

  Meer, Fatima (ed.), The CODESA File: An Institute for Black Research Project, Madiba Publishers, Durban, 1993

  Meli, Francis, South Africa Belongs to Us: A History of the ANC, Zimbabwe Publishing House, Harare, 1988

  Menell, Clive, Memoir on Mandela (unpublished), 1995

  Menell, Joe, and Angus Gibson, Mandela (film), 1995. Research interviews: Mabel Mandela, Godfrey Pitje, Ismail Meer, Joe Slovo, Albertina Sisulu, Leabie Piliso, Joe Matthews, Nthato Motlana, Winnie Mandela, Eddie Daniels, Sonny Venkatrathnam, Ahmed Kathrada

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  ________, Nelson Mandela: A Biography, Hamish Hamilton, London, 1997

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  Moodie, T. Dunbar, “The Moral Economy of the Black Miners’ Strike of 1946,” Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 13, No. 1, Oct. 1986

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  Motsisi, Casey “Kid” (ed. Mothobi Mutloatse), Casey and Company: Selected Writings, Ravan, Johannesburg, 1980

  Mphahlele, Ezekiel, Down Second Avenue, Faber & Faber, London, 1959

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  O’Meara, Dan, Forty Lost Years: The Apartheid State and the Politics of the National Party 1948–1994, Ravan Press, Randburg and Ohio University Press, Athens, 1996

  Ottaway, David, Chained Together: Mandela, de Klerk and the Struggle to Remake South Africa, Times Books, New York, 1993

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  Padmore, George, Pan-Africanism or Communism? The Coming Struggle for Africa, Dennis Dobson, London, 1956

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  ________, Hope for South Africa, Pall Mall Press, London, 1958

  ________, Journey Continued, Oxford University Press, 1988

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  ________, “Killing the Messenger: A History of the Rand Daily Mail” (unpublished), 1996

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  Sanders, James, “A Struggle for Representation: The International Media Treatment of South Africa, 1972–1979” (unpublished Ph.D. thesis), University of London, 1997 (to be published in 1999)

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  Schadeberg, Jurgen, Voices from Robben Island, Ravan, Johannesburg, 1994

  Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., Robert Kennedy and His Times, André Deutsch, London, 1978

  Schneider, Martin (ed.), Madiba: Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela: A Celebration, Martin Schneider & Co. and Twidale Publishing, Johannesburg, 1997

  Scott, David, Ambassador in Black and White: Thirty Years of Changing Africa, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1981

  Seekings, Jeremy, “The Fragile Front: The United Democratic Front and the Referendum Issue, 1983–84” (unpublished seminar paper), University of Cape Town, 1993

  ________, “What Was the United Democratic Front?” (unpublished seminar paper), Yale University, 1994

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  ________, Political Africa, Stevens, London, 1961

  Seldon, Anthony, Major: A Political Life, Phoenix, London, 1997

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  A Short Pictorial History of the University College of Fort Hare, 1916–1959, Lovedale Press, Lovedale, 1961

  Shubin, Vladimir, “The Soviet Union/Russian Federation’s Relations with South Africa, with Special Reference to the Period Since 1980,” African Affairs, Vol. 95, 1996

  Shultz, George P., Turmoil and Triumph: My Years as Secretary of State, Scribner’s, New York, 1993

  Simons, Jack, and Ray Simons, Class and Color in South Africa 1850–1950, International Defense and Aid Fund for Southern Africa, London, 1983

  Singh, Anant, Countdown to Freedom: Ten Days That Changed South Africa (video, 1994, directed by Danny Schechter)

  ________, Prisoners of Hope: Robben Island Reunion (video, 1995, directed by Danny

  Schechter)

  Sisulu, Walter, “National Liberation” (unpublished essay), 1977

  ________, interview with George Houser and Herbert Shore, Sept.–Oct. 1995

  Slovo, Gillian, Every Secret Thing, Little, Brown, London, 1997

  Slovo, Joe, The Unfinished Autobiography, Ravan Press, Randburg, and Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1995

  South African Institute of Race Relations (SAIIR), Surveys, 1957–1998, SAIIR, Johannesburg

  Soyinka, Wole, Mandela’s Earth and Other Poems, Random House, New York, 1988

  Sparks, Allister, The Death of Apartheid (film, 1994, directed
by Mick Gold)

  ________, The Mind of South Africa, Heinemann, London, 1990

  ________, Tomorrow Is Another Country: The Inside Story of South Africa’s Negotiated Revolution, Heinemann, London, 1995

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  Stubbs, Aelred (ed.), Steve Biko: I Write What I Like, Heinemann, London, 1978

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  Switzer, Les (ed.), South Africa’s Alternative Press: Voices of Protest and Resistance, 1880–1960, Cambridge University Press, 1997

  Tabata, I. B., The All African Convention, Johannesburg People’s Press, Johannesburg, 1950

  ________, The Boycott as Weapon of Struggle, All African Convention Committee, Cape Town, 1952

  Tambo, Oliver, Preparing for Power: Oliver Tambo Speaks (compiled by Adelaide Tambo), Heinemann Educational Books, London, 1987

  Thatcher, Margaret, The Downing Street Years, HarperCollins, London, 1993

  Themba, Can (ed. Essop Patel), The World of Can Themba, Ravan Press, Johannesburg, 1985

  Thompson, Leonard, A History of South Africa, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1995

  ________, The Political Mythology of Apartheid, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1985

  Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Vols. 1–5, TRC, Cape Town, 1998

  Tutu, Desmond (ed. John Allen), The Rainbow People of God, Doubleday, London, 1994

  Tyler, Humphrey, Life in the Time of Sharpeville, Kwela Books, Cape Town, 1995

  United Nations Centre Against Apartheid Notes and Documents, “Observance of Mr. Nelson R. Mandela’s Sixtieth Birthday,” August 1978

  United Nations Department of Public Information, The United Nations and Apartheid, 1948–1994, New York, 1994

  United States Senate Hearings Before the Subcommittee on African Affairs of the Committee on Foreign Relations, 94th Congress, Second Session on South Africa, South Africa: U.S. Policy and the Role of U.S. Corporations, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1977

  van Schoor, W. P., The Origin and Development of Segregation in South Africa, Teachers’ League of South Africa, Cape Town, 1951

  van Zyl Slabbert, Frederik, The Last White Parliament, Sidgwick & Jackson, London, 1985

  Vigne, Randolph, Liberals Against Apartheid: A History of the Liberal Party of South Africa, 1953–68, Macmillan Press Ltd., Basingstoke, 1997

  Waldmeir, Patti, Anatomy of a Miracle: The End of Apartheid and the Birth of the New South Africa, Viking, London, 1997

  Welsh, Frank, A History of South Africa, HarperCollins, London, 1998

  White, T. R. H., “Z. K. Matthews and the Formation of the ANC Youth League,” Kleio, No. XXVII, 1995

  Whyte, Quintin, Behind the Racial Tensions in South Africa, South African Institute of Race Relations, Johannesburg, 1953

  Willan, Brian (ed.), Sol Plaatje: Selected Writings, Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg, 1996

  Winter, Gordon, “Inside BOSS and After,” Lobster, No. 18, 1989

  ________, Inside BOSS: South Africa’s Secret Police, Penguin, Middlesex, 1981

  Woods, Donald, Biko, Paddington Press, New York and London, 1978

  Woodward, Bob, Veil: The Secret Wars of the CIA 1981–1987, Simon & Schuster, London, 1987

  Wyatt, Woodrow (ed. Sarah Curtis), The Journals of Woodrow Wyatt, Vol. 1, Macmillan, London, 1998

  Zwelonke, D. M. (pseudonym), Robben Island, Heinemann African Writers Series, London, 1973

  This plain thatched rondavel, which still stands at the Great Place of Mqhekezweni, was the home of the young Mandela from the age of nine. It was in a remote part of the Transkei, scarcely touched by white intruders, but for Mandela it was the center of the world. (Illustrations credit ill.1)

  Chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo, the acting regent of the Tembu people in the Transkei, was Mandela’s guardian for much of his youth, and his model for benign authority and chiefly style. (Illustrations credit ill.2)

  The nineteen-year-old Mandela was still a “country boy” whose aspirations remained in the Transkei: he was conscious of his aristocratic background, not particularly interested in politics, and, like his guardian, very clothes-conscious. (Illustrations credit ill.3)

  In 1944 Mandela was married in Johannesburg to Evelyn Mase, a nurse from the Transkei who was a cousin of his close friend Walter Sisulu. Not at all political, she was increasingly religious and became a Jehovah’s Witness. (Illustrations credit ill.4)

  From 1952 the law firm of Mandela & Tambo inhabited a picturesque old building, which still stands in downtown Johannesburg. It became the focus for black people’s rights and political activism. Tambo was the backroom lawyer, Mandela the more flamboyant pleader in court. (Illustrations credit ill.5)

  Black Johannesburg in the 1950s was bursting with creative energy, whether in music, writing, sport or dancing … (Illustrations credit ill.6)

  … but Mandela was now immersed in protests against the apartheid government, with colleagues (above) like Walter Sisulu (right foreground), J. B. Marks (center, with hat) and Ruth First (right background). In the Defiance Campaign of 1952 (below) he worked alongside both the conservative Dr. Moroka (left) and the communist Dr. Dadoo (right). (Illustrations credit ill.7)

  (Illustrations credit ill.8)

  Mandela sparred regularly with boxing champions like Jerry Moloi—not just to keep fit, but as training in self-discipline and control, which had their own relevance to political leadership. (Illustrations credit ill.9)

  The accused in the Treason Trial (below), which began in 1957, came from all races and were brought closer by the ordeal. They included most prominent African politicians, including Sisulu (top row, third from right), Duma Nokwe (second row from top, smiling, in the center) and Mandela (center). Among the many white accused were Rusty Bernstein (front row, third from left) and Helen Joseph (second row, left). (Illustrations credit ill.10)

  Mandela’s wedding to his second wife, Winnie, in 1958 was attended by a few close friends, including the communist writer Michael Harmel (left) and Ruth Mompati (next to Mandela), Mandela’s secretary, who later became Ambassador to Switzerland. (Illustrations credit ill.11)

  LEFT: Winnie, Mandela and their second daughter, Zindzi, photographed in 1961. (Illustrations credit ill.12)

  RIGHT: Mandela, at the Treason Trial in 1958, had a short-lived triumph when the prosecution briefly withdrew its indictment. He was known as the best-dressed man in the trial; but his close colleagues increasingly saw him as a serious leader and thinker. (Illustrations credit ill.13)

  When Mandela burned his pass-book in the turmoil after the Sharpeville massacre in 1960, he hoped to initiate a mass pass-burning campaign. But the government soon clamped down on all protests, and banned the African National Congress for thirty years. (Illustrations credit ill.14)

  In 1962 Mandela toured Africa to gain support for the ANC’s guerrilla army. At a conference in Ethiopia he was joined by his exiled colleague Oliver Tambo. (Illustrations credit ill.15)

  At the military headquarters in Algeria, where the bitter civil war was ending, Mandela and his colleague Robert Resha (second from left) met revolutionary leaders and received advice about guerrilla warfare. (Illustrations credit ill.16)

  Mandela spent ten days in London in June 1962; his friend Mary Benson took his picture outside Westminster Abbey. Many well-wishers warned him not to return to South Africa, where he would almost certainly be caught by the police. (Illustrations credit ill.17)

  OPPOSITE: Eight men were sentenced to life imprisonment at the Rivonia trial in 1964. Six were Africans. Top row: Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Govan Mbeki, Raymond Mhlaba. Bottom row: Elias Motsoaledi, Andew Mlangeni, Ahmed Kathrada (the one Indian), Dennis Goldberg (who was imprisoned separately in a white jail in Pretoria). (Illustrations credit ill.18)

 
; ABOVE: Mandela’s mother came to Pretoria in 1964 for her son’s trial, and watched him being sentenced to life imprisonment. Four years afterward she visited him on Robben Island, and died a few weeks later. (Illustrations credit ill.19)

  Two photographs taken on Robben Island in 1965 provided virtually the only images of the Rivonia prisoners for almost three decades. For the first, the prisoners in the second row in the courtyard were put to sewing clothes instead of breaking stones. Mandela has been identified as fifth from the left in the second row, Ahmed Kathrada is seventh, Govan Mbeki eighth, Walter Sisulu eleventh. Soon afterward they were put back to stone-breaking. The second photograph shows Mandela and Sisulu talking together in the prison courtyard. (Illustrations credit ill.20)

  (Illustrations credit ill.21)

  Kaiser (K.D.) Matanzima (in blazer), Mandela’s nephew and earlier his hero, became leader of the “independent” Transkei while Mandela was on Robben Island. He visited Winnie in Soweto. Mandela’s son Makgatho is on the right. (Illustrations credit ill.22)

  Mandela (left) was working in the garden on Robben Island in 1977 with the Namibian leader Toivo ja Toivo (center) and Justice Mpanza (right) when they were photographed against their will while visiting journalists were being escorted around the prison. (Illustrations credit ill.23)

  With Mandela out of sight in jail, the varied images from his past became more powerful: whether the handsome man-about-town with his glamorous young wife, Winnie; the bearded “Black Pimpernel” emerging from underground; or the Xhosa prince appearing in tribal regalia for his trial in 1962. (Illustrations credit ill.24)

  (Illustrations credit ill.25)

  (Illustrations credit ill.26)

  The larger-than-life bust on London’s South Bank, unveiled by Oliver Tambo in 1985, showed a thick-set, heroic Mandela, in keeping with his superhuman mythology. (Illustrations credit ill.27)

 

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