Vale Nelson Mandela: on freedom, forgiveness and peace

Vale Nelson Mandela (1918-2013) – thank you for your truly courageous and inspiring life.

mandela change the world

I found it so moving today to open my Facebook feed and find such an outpouring of grief and gratitude from around the world for this amazing man and his legacy. So I thought I’d share here some of my favourite of his words.

mandela bw

“As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn’t leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I’d still be in prison.”

And this, as told by Bill Clinton:

I’ll tell you, one of the most meaningful conversations I ever had in my life was with Nelson Mandela, who has been a wonderful friend to me and to Hillary and especially to our daughter. And I remember one time, you know, after I got to know him, I said, “You know, Mr. President, you’re a very great man with a great spirit and all that, but you’re also a shrewd politician,” kind of like what I was saying about Jim. You know, he is a good guy, but the stuff he does makes sense, too. And I said, “That was pretty smart of you to have your jailers come to the Inauguration and all of that, but let me ask you something.” I said, “Didn’t you really hate them for what they did?”

He said, “Oh, yeah, I hated them for a long time.” He said, “I stayed alive on hate for 12 years. I broke rocks every day, and I stayed alive on hate.” And he said, “They took a lot away from me. They took me away from my wife, and it subsequently destroyed my marriage. They took me away from seeing my children grow up. They abused me mentally and physically. And one day,” he said, “I realized they could take it all except my mind and my heart.” He said, “Those things I would have to give to them, and I simply decided not to give them away.”

And so—so I said to him, I said, “Well, what about when you were getting out of prison?” I said, “The day you got out of prison in 1990, it was Sunday morning, and I got my daughter up early in the morning, and I took her down to the kitchen, and I turned on the television, and she was just a little girl then, and I sat her up on the kitchen counter. And I said, ‘Chelsea, I want you to watch this. This is one of the most important things you’ll ever see in your life.”‘ And I said, “I watched you walk down that dirt road to freedom.” I said, “Now, when you were walking down there, and you realized how long you had been in their prison, didn’t you hate them then? Didn’t you feel some hatred?”

He said, “Yes, I did a little bit.” He said, “I felt that.” And he said, “Frankly, I was kind of afraid, too, because I hadn’t been free in so long.” But he said, “As I felt the anger rising up, I thought to myself, ‘They have already had you for 27 years. And if you keep hating them, they’ll have you again.’ And I said, ‘I want to be free.’ And so I let it go. I let it go.”

[from Bill Clinton, Remarks at a Reception for Representative James E. Clyburn in Columbia, South Carolina, March 29, 2000]

Mandela's cell on Robben Island. One of the places he was incarcerated during his 27 years in prison.

Mandela’s cell on Robben Island. One of the places he was incarcerated during his 27 years in prison.

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‘Mr. Mandela is considered a chief of his tribe; his family name is Mandiba. But he represents a much larger tribe. He is the chief of the tribe of courage, and decency for all of mankind. There is not a more significant, important, profound world leader of this century.
A hundred years from now, they will speak his name, and somewhere a child will be imbued with his spirit and use that inspiration to achieve greatness. This is his legacy, a path of light for generations to come.’

— Muhammad Ali

(Well worth reading the whole of Ali’s tribute here, but have some tissues handy).

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“What counts in life is not the mere fact that we have lived. It is what difference we have made to the lives of others that will determine the significance of the life we lead.”
— Nelson Mandela

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Anti-apartheid leader and African Nation

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“At least *these* boat people aren’t claiming Terra Nullius”

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Says so much in just a few words:

boat people terra nullius

Thanks to @kateausburn for this photo,
to the wordsmith who created the sign,
and to the Asylum Seekers Resource Action Centre for sharing it.

 

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The Climate Change Authority is calling for submissions

Please consider taking a few minutes to make a submission to the Climate Change Authority — the deadline is **tomorrow** (Friday)!! Even if you only write a couple of paragraphs, it really helps. They need to know that we care passionately about this and want real action.

Here’s my submission.. a bit rambly, but the main thing is just to send in something.

Please feel free to borrow bits from mine if helps. GetUp also has info that can guide you at this link below. Thanks!

https://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/climate-action-now/ambition-submission/

Dear Review Panel,

I would like to add my voice to the vast majority of Australians1 who want effective and immediate action to reduce carbon emissions — as is occurring with the current Carbon Pricing system — and indeed want our government to do even more to make sure we achieve our 2020 targets and reach zero emissions by 2050 at the latest.

Climate change is, in my opinion (an opinion backed by the most up to date scientific evidence and consensus), the single most important threat facing our planet and our way of life.

Prevention is by far the best policy, and inaction or parsimony in this area now will cost us heavily in the future in so many ways.

It is already costing us – financially and in lives and heartache – in the increased number of extreme weather events such as floods, bushfires and tornados.

It is ridiculous to look at isolated personal cost-of-living bills in the face of such an overwhelming national and global emergency.

For instance, even if it were true that axing the carbon pricing system could save families $500 per year (and there does not seem much good evidence for that claim), our insurance premiums are rising at a rate way beyond that due to the increase in extreme events, and will continue to do so.

We are also currently spending billions trying to ‘protect our borders’ from Asylum Seekers and yet the real threat is within, in our reliance on coal and other polluting and non-renewable resources for energy and manufacturing and our refusal to face up to the need to change.

The numbers of people displaced through climate change in the future will make today’s ‘problem’ seem miniscule.

The world is warming, and humans are the primary cause (as the IPCC report confirmed).

We have the means to change to renewable clean energy production and to reduce our carbon footprint, and incentives such as a carbon pricing scheme or ETS are essential to provide the will.

The technology (eg solar and other renewables), the design (passive solar for housing, thermal mass etc) and the materials (eg hempcrete which can act as a carbon sink) are already available. Well-funded R&D in these areas will continue to make these more and more efficient and cost-effective.

Failure to act now to set and take action to achieve significant targets is so vastly irresponsible that it beggars belief.

Indeed, I feel that failure to act is immoral, and will be seen that way by future generations who will suffer in ways beyond imagining for our obsession with money and our inability to envision the vast benefits of embracing positive change now.

I recommend that the CCA adopt a target of 25% emissions reduction by 2020 and a zero emissions target by 2050.

yours sincerely,
Beth Spencer

1. that a majority of Australians want action on carbon emissions and climate change has been supported by numerous polls, including a recent one reported in the news this week that showed only a small minority wanted the carbon pricing axed and/or supported the LNP’s ‘direct action’ plan.

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Here’s the link again to make a submission – remember, even a few lines will help let the Climate Change Authority know that we care and we want action.

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