WINNIE MANDELA: SOUTH AFRICA'S FLAWED HEROINE
Born Nomzamo Winifred Zanyiwe Madikizela, and always known simply as "Winnie", she was married to Nelson Mandela for 38 years -- one of the most storied romances of modern history
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Winnie Madikizela-Mandela's marriage to Nelson
Mandela and her anti-apartheid activism ensured many South Africans saw her as
"the mother of the nation", but her past was littered with dark
controversies.
Born Nomzamo Winifred Zanyiwe
Madikizela, and always known simply as "Winnie", she was married to
Nelson for 38 years -- one of the most storied romances of modern history.
Most of
their marriage was spent apart, with Nelson imprisoned for 27 years, leaving
her to raise their two daughters alone and to keep alive his political dream
under the repressive white-minority regime.
In 1990
the world watched when Nelson Mandela finally walked out of prison -- hand in
hand with Winnie.
But they
separated just two years later and divorced in 1996 after a legal wrangle that
revealed her affair with a young bodyguard.
With or
without Nelson, Winnie built her own role as a tough, glamourous and outspoken
black activist with a loyal grassroots following in the segregated townships.
"From
every situation I have found myself in, you can read the political heat in the
country," she said in a biography.
Winnie was
born September 26, 1936, in the village of Mbongweni in what is now Eastern
Cape.
She
completed university, a rarity for black women at the time, and became the
first qualified social worker at Johannesburg's Baragwanath Hospital.
It was her
political awakening, especially her research work in Alexandra township on
infant mortality, which found 10 deaths in every 1,000 births.
"I
started to realise the abject poverty under which most people were forced to
live, the appalling conditions created by the inequalities of the system,"
she said.
HOUNDED BY POLICE
Nelson
Mandela, who was then married to his first wife, met Winnie at a bus stop in
Soweto when she was 22.
They wed
in June 1958, but he soon went underground, pursued by the apartheid
authorities.
In October
that year, Winnie was arrested for the first time at a protest by women against
the pass system that restricted movements of black people in white-designated
areas.
After
Nelson was sentenced to life in prison in 1964, Winnie was also in and out of
jail as the police hounded her in a bid to demoralise him.
Government
security forces tortured her, tried locking her up, confined her to
Johannesburg's Soweto township, and then banished her to the desolate town of
Brandfort, where her house was bombed twice.
She was
allowed to visit her husband in prison rarely, and they were always divided by
a glass screen.
LINKED TO 'NECKLACING’
Throughout
the height of apartheid, Winnie remained at the forefront of the struggle,
urging students in the Soweto uprising in 1976 to "fight to the bitter
end".
But in the
1980s, the militant-martyr began to be seen as a liability for Mandela and the
liberation movement.
She had
surrounded herself with a band of vigilante bodyguards called the Mandela
United Football Club, who earned a terrifying reputation for violence.
Winnie was
widely linked to "necklacing", when suspected traitors were burnt
alive by a petrol-soaked car tyre being put over their head and set alight.
Her
notoriety was reinforced by a speech in 1986 when she declared that "with
our boxes of matches and our necklaces we shall liberate this country."
SOMETHING WENT HORRIBLY WRONG
In 1991,
Winnie was convicted of kidnapping and assault over the killing of Stompie
Moeketsi, a 14-year-old boy.
Moeketsi,
who was accused being an informer, was murdered by her bodyguards in 1989.
Her jail
sentence was reduced to a fine, and she denied involvement in any murders when
she appeared before Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission hearings.
"She
was a tremendous stalwart of our struggle, and icon of liberation -- something
went wrong, horribly, badly wrong," Tutu said as damning testimony
implicated her.
She served
as a deputy minister in President Mandela's government, but was sacked for
insubordination and eased out of the top ranks of the ruling party.
After a
2003 conviction for fraud, she later rehabilitated her political career winning
a seat in parliament in 2009 elections.
But her
bitterness emerged in 2010 newspaper interview, saying: "Mandela let us
down. He agreed to a bad deal for the blacks."
She also
called Tutu a "cretin" and the reconciliation process a
"charade", though she later claimed the quotes were never meant to be
published
Despite it
all, she was a regular visitor travelling from Soweto -- where she still lived
-- to Mandela's bedside in his final months, and she said she was present when
he died.
He did not
leave her anything in his will.
At her
lavish 80th birthday party in Cape Town, Madikizela-Mandela wore a sparkling
white dress and beamed with pleasure as she was lauded by guests that included
senior politicians from rival parties.
"Mama
Winnie has lived a rich and eventful life, whose victories and setbacks have
traced the progress of the struggle of our people for freedom," then vice
president Cyril Ramaphosa, who is now president, told guests.
SOURCE: AFP
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