TRIUMPHANT:
Mandela salutes supporters at the Soweto soccer stadium
Feb. 11, 1990
At Long Last, Freedom
By Richard Stengel
When
the slender, white-haired Nelson Mandela, then 71, first glimpsed the
crowd assembled at the gates of Victor Verster prison, he instinctively
raised his right arm in the black-power salute of a clenched fista
simple public gesture that he had not been able to make during his 27
years, six months and seven days of imprisonment. His release had been
orchestrated by South Africa's white minority government, but it was a
reluctant acknowledgement of what had become an unstoppable force. The
world had lost patience with white rule in South Africa and had placed
its faith in a man whom no one had seen in decades. That Mandela seemed
not only unbowed but undamaged, and preached reconciliation rather than
revenge, won over all but the staunchest defenders of the the country's
system of racial oppression known as apartheid. Later that afternoon, on
the day of his own walk to freedom, he told the enormous crowd assembled
at the Grand Parade square in Cape Town, "Our march to freedom is
irreversible." The man who would become President four years later had
never doubted it during what he called his "long, lonely, wasted years"
in prison. It had just taken a lot longer than he had expected.
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