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- <text id=90TT1646>
- <title>
- June 25, 1990: The Burden Of Being A Superstar
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 25, 1990 Who Gives A Hoot?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- The Burden of Being a Superstar
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Leaving a host of problems at home, Nelson Mandela is coming to
- the U.S. in search of money and renewed pressure on South
- Africa
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington and
- Scott MacLeod with Mandela
- </p>
- <p> If Nelson Mandela had been a dutiful young man, respectful
- of tradition and authority, he would have grown up to be a
- chief of the Tembu tribe in the South African homeland of
- Transkei. Instead he rebelled against tribal ways, an arranged
- marriage and the white government's brutal apartheid system.
- He eventually became the world's most famous prisoner and,
- since his release four months ago, the de facto leader of the
- African National Congress.
- </p>
- <p> He will be 72 next month, but his burdens are at least as
- heavy as they were when he led an urban guerrilla band or
- sweated out 27 years in prison. He heads a liberation movement
- that is striving to turn itself into a political party. At the
- same time, he is trying to organize negotiations with the South
- African government on a new and just constitution.
- </p>
- <p> Last week he began a six-week, 13-country swing to persuade
- the rest of the world not to reward President F.W. de Klerk too
- early for easing up on apartheid. And when he arrives in the
- U.S. this week, he will be forced into still another exhausting
- role: heroic superstar. One of the most honored and respected
- men alive, Mandela is in the spotlight everywhere he goes. But
- in the U.S., where media fire storms are an art form, the
- visit-as-event will reach its highest stage. He will be
- besieged by cameras and jostling admirers, beseeched by myriad
- groups seeking his imprimatur, and bemedaled at parades and
- stadium rallies for eleven days in eight cities from Harlem to
- Hollywood.
- </p>
- <p> Mandela holds a special place in the feelings of American
- civil rights campaigners, liberals and black activists. During
- the Reagan years, when such forces were dispirited and often
- divided, opposition to apartheid and support for Mandela
- provided them with a unifying passion. No leader since the Rev.
- Martin Luther King Jr. has brought together such a diverse
- coalition in the fight against racial injustice.
- </p>
- <p> But Mandela is not traveling as a symbol. "It's a political
- visit," stresses Lindiwe Mabuza, the A.N.C.'s chief
- representative in Washington. Mandela is seeking two things:
- first, reassurance that economic sanctions will not be lifted
- until South Africa is headed toward a peaceful political
- solution, and second, pledges of funds to rebuild the A.N.C. in
- South Africa. The organization was legalized only four months
- ago after almost 30 years of outlaw status. Mandela's message
- in Washington, says Mabuza, will be, "Why turn off the heat
- when the water is about to boil?"
- </p>
- <p> There is no prospect that Washington will soon cancel the
- trade embargoes Congress put in place in 1986, and George Bush
- will probably tell Mandela as much during their planned meeting
- at the White House. Europe, however, is wavering. Officials of
- the European Community say they detect movement toward
- "rewarding" the De Klerk government for its reforms.
- </p>
- <p> One reason for the slight shift toward Pretoria is the skill
- with which De Klerk has managed his side of the contest with
- the A.N.C. Since his election last year to replace the
- autocratic P.W. Botha, he has done more to ease the country's
- internal conflict than all his predecessors combined. With the
- pace of change increasing, Mandela and the A.N.C. are in danger
- of losing the initiative.
- </p>
- <p> Just after Mandela left the country on his current trip, De
- Klerk freed another group of political prisoners and lifted the
- four-year-old national state of emergency, except in the
- province of Natal, scene of heavy fighting between rival black
- factions. Though those steps fulfilled more of the A.N.C.'s
- preconditions for negotiations, the congress has delayed a
- formal response until July 10. The postponement gave De Klerk
- an opening to tweak the A.N.C. "We are on the threshold of the
- real negotiation process," he said. "The A.N.C. must now stop
- vacillating."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the 78-year-old A.N.C. is having trouble making the
- transition from revolutionary underground to political party.
- To increase its weight at the bargaining table, it has launched
- a membership drive. It is also opening 14 offices around the
- country and providing for the expected return of 20,000 exiled
- members. Completing this expansion, A.N.C. officials estimate,
- will cost $100 million or more.
- </p>
- <p> Mandela's style is leadership by example, and he has not
- found it easy to take over day-to-day control of the A.N.C. He
- has had to carry out his onerous public duties while being
- distracted by a family crisis. Last month the reputation of his
- controversial wife Winnie was further damaged when her former
- chief bodyguard was convicted in a Johannesburg court of
- murdering a teenage black activist. The judge found that the
- youth had been beaten at the Mandelas' Soweto home in Winnie's
- presence. Mandela said the government was smearing his wife in
- court without giving her a hearing.
- </p>
- <p> Many worried blacks and whites do not understand why Mandela
- has not used his nonpareil status to end the fighting between
- his supporters and the Inkatha organization, led by Chief
- Mangosuthu Buthelezi, which has killed thousands since 1985.
- During his years in prison, Mandela indicated that a top
- priority after his release would be to restore black unity by
- mending the rift. But when he proposed a meeting with Buthelezi
- last March, militants inside his organization vetoed the idea.
- "They nearly throttled me," said Mandela, who insists that he
- must accept such decisions because he remains "a loyal and
- disciplined member of the A.N.C."
- </p>
- <p> Theoretically, Mandela and his organization also advocate
- continuing "armed struggle" against the government, but in
- practice that option faded when the A.N.C. agreed to operate
- as a legal party. In any case, the congress has demonstrated
- its ineffectiveness at guerrilla warfare over three decades.
- Violence is not politically useful in South Africa; the white
- security forces contain it easily. Change there has become
- inevitable mostly because blacks outnumber whites about 5 to
- 1 and are becoming stronger politically and economically.
- </p>
- <p> All the antiapartheid movement's tasks at home and abroad
- have come to rest squarely on Mandela's shoulders. He embarked
- on his journey only a week after removal of a cyst from his
- bladder, and in recent years he has also had tuberculosis and
- prostate surgery. There were reports--promptly denied by
- A.N.C. spokesmen and Mandela--that he felt faint last week
- in Geneva and had to cancel a meeting. Out of concern for his
- health, planners in the U.S. tried to schedule free time
- between large events so Mandela would be able to rest. But
- Mandela does not have to try to do everything on this trip.
- Demand for the international superstar is so intense that the
- A.N.C. intends to arrange a second coast-to-coast American tour
- before the end of the year. By then he may have maneuvered his
- party and his country onto a path toward a more peaceful
- future.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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