Nelson Mandela’s pro-Palestinian legacy lives on, a decade after his death | News24

Nelson Mandela’s pro-Palestinian legacy lives on, a decade after his death  | News24



South African President Nelson Mandela greets Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat as he arrives for the opening of the 12th Non-Aligned Movement summit in Durban on 2 September 1998.

  • Nelson Mandela’s pro-Palestinian legacy lives on, with the ANC continuing to champion the cause.
  • Mandela’s embrace of Yasser Arafat after his release from prison in 1990 symbolised his support for the Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation.
  • The ANC recently backed a motion to suspend diplomatic ties with Israel until it agreed to a ceasefire in Gaza.

Days after his release from 27 years in prison in February 1990, anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela gave Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat a bear hug, symbolising his embrace of a cause his country’s governing ANC continues to champion.

It was a gesture as controversial then as South Africa’s support for the Palestinian cause is today, but Mandela brushed off criticism.

Arafat’s Palestine Liberation Organisation had been an unwavering supporter of Mandela’s struggle against white minority rule and many South Africans saw parallels between it and the Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation.

“We were fortunate that with their support, we were able to achieve our freedom … My grandfather … said our freedom is incomplete without the Palestinian struggle,” his grandson Mandla Mandela recalled in an interview ahead of the 10th commemoration of Mandela’s death.

Mandla Mandela (centre) during a mass pro-Palestinian march in Cape Town on 11 November 2023.

News24 Storm Simpson / News24

From 3 to 5 December, Mandla Mandela, who is also an ANC lawmaker, hosted a solidarity conference in Johannesburg for the Palestinians.

It was attended by members of Hamas, an organisation Israel has vowed to annihilate in retaliation for its 7 October attack on southern Israel in which 1 200 people were killed and around 240 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

Israeli bombing of Gaza since then has killed more than 15 500 people, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run government, and displaced more than three-quarters of the strip’s 2.3 million population.

Last month, the ruling ANC backed a motion in Parliament to suspend diplomatic ties with Israel until it agreed to a ceasefire in Gaza.

READ | National Assembly adopts EFF motion calling for cutting diplomatic ties with Israel

Land annexed

“Palestinians still do not enjoy fully their freedom on their land. And instead, their land has been annexed more and more, something that we also faced in South Africa,” said the ANC’s deputy chairperson of international relations, Obed Bapela.

Israel has disputed the comparison with apartheid as a lie motivated by anti-semitism, but many South Africans follow Mandela’s lead.

“That’s something that he (Mandela) never compromised on and nor should we,” poet and author Lebogang Mashile told Reuters.

Some in South Africa’s Jewish community criticise the ANC’s stance, pointing out that Mandela himself eventually tried to build bridges with Israel.

READ | SA Jewish Board of Deputies slams Western Cape ANC for hosting Hamas leaders in Cape Town

Historian and author of “Jewish Memories of Mandela”, David Saks, noted that Mandela was the only South African president to have visited Israel since 1994 – albeit only after he left office – and that “he received a rapturous welcome from the Israeli public,” addressing then prime minister Ehud Barak and then president Ezer Weisman as “my friends”.

Former South African President Nelson Mandela (L)

Former South African President Nelson Mandela (L) answers questions with Israeli President Ezer Weizman during his visit to Jerusalem 18 October 1999. Mandela, on his first visit to the Jewish state, arrived here after visiting Iran and Syria.

AFP Menahem Kahana / AFP

“He pointed the way which things should have gone [diplomatically with Israel], but [they] didn’t go that way,” Saks said.




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