Nelson Mandela was like a “magician” who conjured a united nation out of a country teetering on the brink of war, South African Nobel laureate Desmond Tutu said Monday.
“Everybody
was saying we would go up in flames,” the archbishop emeritus told
a memorial service for Mandela in Johannesburg.
“He really was like a magician with a magic wand, turning us into this
glorious, multi-coloured rainbow people.
“This
repulsive caterpillar, South Africa, that used to be the world’s pariah, he
turned into a beautiful, beautiful butterfly.
“That is what
we are celebrating,” Tutu told hundreds of mourners of all races
who filled the memorial venue for an emotional service.
Tutu said the
world must not mourn his old friend’s death, but rather celebrate his life and
example.
“He emerged
from that crucible of suffering and being dehumanised, breaking rocks… sewing
post office bags, working in the quarry,” during his 27-year
incarceration under the apartheid regime’s racial laws.
“But instead
of being consumed by hate and a lust for revenge, (he became) a stalwart for
reconciliation… and forgiveness.”
The moving gathering ended with singer Johnny Clegg performing the track
“Asimbonanga” he had written for Mandela in 1976.
The title means “We’ve never seen him” and refers to the long years Mandela
spent in jail when all images of him were banned.
AFP
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