Showing posts with label Mandela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mandela. Show all posts

December 7, 2013

Nelson Mandela's legacy

The passing of Nelson Mandela is a significant moment in world history. In 2010 I transited through South Africa on the first ever Nelson Mandela day. As soon a the Johannesburg airport staff told people of the day, weary travelers' faces would smile. The airport displayed a larger than life statue of Nelson Mandela made of beads. He was larger than life and his concern for all people will remain as an enduring legacy. Here is one of his comments that I think is very important: 
"As the years progress one increasingly realises the importance of friendship and human solidarity. And if a 90-year-old may offer some unsolicited advice on this occasion, it would be that you, irrespective of your age, should place human solidarity, the concern for the other, at the centre of the values by which you live." - Lecture in Kliptown, Soweto, July 12, 2008.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/nelson-mandela-quotes-12-of-his-most-famous-statements-20131206-hv4nl.html#ixzz2mhcTJ1Br
At Johannesburg airport in 2010

July 22, 2010

Madiba Nelson Mandela’s impact throughout the world

Nelson Mandela’s cross cultural influence has been obvious throughout this trip. While in Oslo, Norway, Nelson Mandela’s photograph, sayings, and memorabilia were available throughout the city acknowledging and celebrating his Nobel Peace Prize. The movie Invictus was shown on a number or planes I have travelled on. When I flew from UK to Zambia via Johannesburg I arrived in South Africa on Nelson Mandela Day (18th July), a day that celebrates his birthday and the significant impact he has had in Africa. Even the customs officer was excited, and happily told us of the importance of the day. Everyone he told broke into a smile, certainly changing the mood of the customs hall. In the airport at Johannesburg there was a large statue of Nelson Mandela created over 8 months from tiny glass beads. In the plane to Zambia, even the headrest covers celebrated Nelson Mandela Day! He certainly continues to have an impact throughout Africa as evidenced by presentations at the conference in Zambia. At the ISSBD conference a new book was described, with one chapter titled: “Managing Africa’s multiculturalism: Bringing the Madiba magic into the African school curriculum” describing the influence of Nelson Mandela’s genre of humanistic psychology on African education.