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By Robert G. Miller
Webster's
Collegiate Dictionary defines the word awesome as expressive of awe,
terrific and extraordinary. But, in layman's language, awesome can best be
described by two words: Nelson Mandela.
Arguably
one of the most recognizable men on the planet, the President Emeritus of
the Republic of South Africa had a three-fold purpose in capping a two-day
visit to Baton Rouge, Louisiana on May 12 as the commencement speaker for
Southern University's Class of 2000. The day before, Mandela had a double
treat when Southern named its School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs
after him in a morning ceremony. Later that evening, he received honorary
doctoral degrees from Southern and Louisiana State University at a
fund-raising banquet at the Radisson Hotel in his honor with proceeds
earmarked for the Nelson Mandela Foundation Children's Fund. This marked
the first time two universities have awarded honorary doctoral degrees
simultaneously.
Nelson
Rolihlahla Mandela, the man who battled South African apartheid and after
a long imprisonment eventually became that nation's president, had an
answer for those asking how
important it was to have a building named after him on Southern's campus.
He said "the fact that I'm here at this naming ceremony is one of the
most upstanding testimonies of what this university means to the
developing world." As Mandela spoke to over 1,000 spectators at this
event, he was obviously very happy. During a performance by a group of
Nigerian dancers, the 81-year-old statesman popped up from his seat and
began to dance. Cheers sprang from the crowd as he later remarked
"the Nigerian dancers reminded me of some of the happiest moments of
my life."
Last
year, when Southern faculty members first discussed a building name,
someone mentioned the name of Winston Churchill, but that didn't elicit
much reaction. However, when Mandela's name was suggested, everyone jumped
on board. Leon Tarver, president of the Southern University System,
immediately embraced the idea and shepherded the name change through the
approval process because his faculty associated Mandela's name with
"courage, endurance, guts, stubborn determination to survive
overwhelming odds, fairness and, above all, forgiveness." As Southern
University strengthens its bond with Mandela, it's also strengthening its
ties to his native South Africa. Southern,
one of the nation's largest predominantly Black universities, recently
entered into a memorandum of understanding with Vista University in
Pretoria, South Africa. The
three-year agreement, financed with more than $500,000 provided by the
U.S. Agency for International Development, will send faculty from the
Nelson Mandela School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs to teach in
Pretoria. Southern faculty also will go to South Africa to show educators
at Vista University techniques for collecting data, analyzing a problem
and then proposing a solution to the country's elected leaders. The
agreement will also benefit Vista University students and faculty by
offering exchanges and scholarships to Southern.
As
many as 1,300 participants attended the $150 per person fund-raising
banquet for Nelson Mandela. They enthusiastically supported him, in not
only receiving his two honorary doctoral degrees from Southern and LSU,
but in graciously accepting lavish praise from public and private
officials on hand. LSU System President William Jenkins, also a native
South African, credited Mandela with fighting both white and Black
domination. "You walked free and with you a nation began to walk
toward freedom," Jenkins said. He referred to the 27 years that
Mandela spent in prison at the hands of South Africa's former white
supremacist government.
Southern
University System President Leon Tarver remarked "Mandela showed an
incredible sense of community in accepting the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize on
behalf of all his countrymen who suffered under apartheid." Mandela
indicated upon his release from prison ten years ago, he initially didn't
want to talk to the white politicians who had kept him behind bars.
"But our brains told us that if we (Blacks) didn't talk to those
people, our country would go up in flames. The most difficult task is not
to change the people around you, but to change yourself," he said.
Mandela stated he felt privileged to become an honorary alumnus of both
Southern and LSU and hoped "to measure up to the very high standards
set by your other alumni."
Spending
27 years behind bars for plotting to overthrow the racist government can
give a person a lot of time to just sit and think, something that people
on the outside do not do enough of, according to Mandela.
"It is a tragedy to go to jail, especially a white man's jail.
But while there, you can sit down when everyone else is asleep and
distance yourself from yourself, and discover how you have behaved. Some
of the things I discovered made me ashamed. I was convinced I did not
belong to this human race," remarked Mandela. He said during his own
self-examination in jail, he realized he had made serious mistakes, and
decided to rectify those mistakes when he got out of prison. His birth
name, Rolihlahla, a Xhosa word, literally means "pulling the branch
of a tree." Colloquially
it means "trouble-maker." It seems appropriate Mandela grew up
to wage war against apartheid and help bring an end to his nation's
state-sanctioned segregation.
After
Mandela's release from prison in 1990 and commitment to stop his people's
armed struggle against the segregationist apartheid government, plans were
made to hold free elections in South Africa. In 1994, Mandela was
inaugurated as the first democratically elected South African president
serving until his retirement last year. He acknowledged his regime
"made many mistakes" during the crucial transitional period, but
succeeded in changing the lives of "our people."
During
Southern University's commencement ceremony, Mandela urged the graduation
class of 700 to find time to examine if they have behaved well in a
civilized world. He stressed "self-examination can lead to a better
life." Whether in public life or not, real leaders "identify
those good men and women, Black or white, no matter their attitudes toward
you, and find a way for them to contribute to society." He urged
graduates to seek advanced degrees advising them a bachelor's degree is no
longer enough if one is to significantly contribute. He also reminded them
that it's necessary for them to acquire a strong knowledge of computers
and the Internet. In his view, high technology is "changing the
fabric of society."
The
graduates soon learned Nelson Mandela has a terrific sense of humor. The
President Emeritus of the Republic of South Africa drew hearty laughter
when he compared himself to computer magnate Bill Gates. He quipped
"I have 39 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. In one thing,
I'm richer than Bill Gates. It will take him a long time before he can
reach my level."
Mandela
Q&A
Nelson
Mandela: Biographical Sketch
Robert
G. Miller is the vice president of Editorial Administration for
iMinorities.com, Inc., and the editor of THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine, New
Orleans, LA.
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