Mandela and
Fidel: What is
not being said
Atilio Borón
THE death of Nelson Mandela has
precipitated a torrent of interpretations on his
life and work, all of which present him as a
disciple of pacifism and a kind of Mother Teresa of
South Africa. This is an essentially incorrect, and
premeditated, image, promoted to obscure the fact
that after the Sharpeville massacre in 1960, the
African National Congress (ANC) adopted a strategy
of armed struggle and sabotage of enterprises and
important economic projects, but without endangering
human life.
Mandela toured diverse African
countries in search of economic and military aid to
sustain this new tactic of struggle. He was detained
in 1962 and, shortly afterward, sentenced to life
imprisonment, 25 years of which he spent relegated
to a maximum security prison, in a cell measuring
2x2 meters. Only as a result of formidable
international pressure to attain his release, these
conditions improved in the last two years of his
detention.
Thus, Mandela was not a "worshipper
of bourgeois legality," but an exceptional political
leader whose strategy and tactics of struggle varied
as the conditions under which his battles were waged
changed. It is said that he was the man who ended
the odious South African apartheid regime, which is
a half truth.
The other half of the merit goes to
Fidel and the Cuban Revolution, which by intervening
in the civil war in Angola, sealed the fate of the
racists, defeating the troops of Zaire (now the
Democratic Republic of the Congo), the South African
army and two Angolan mercenary armies, organized and
financed by the United States through the CIA.
Thanks to Cuba’s heroic cooperation, which once
again demonstrated the noble internationalism of the
Cuban Revolution, Angolan independence was
maintained, laying the bases for the subsequent
emancipation of Namibia and delivering a coup de
grace to South African apartheid.
For that reason, after learning
about the crucial battle of Cuito Cuanavale, on
March 23, 1988, Mandela wrote from prison that the
outcome of what he called the African Stalingrad "was
the turning point for the liberation of our
continent—and of my people—from the scourge of
apartheid." The defeat of the racists and their U.S.
mentors was a mortal blow to the South African
occupation of Namibia and precipitated the beginning
of negotiations with the ANC which, shortly
thereafter, would demolish the racist South African
regime, the joint work of those two giant statesmen
and revolutionaries.
Years later, in the 1995 Cuban-South
Africa Solidarity Conference, Mandela affirmed, "The
Cubans came to our region as doctors, teachers,
soldiers, agricultural experts, but never as
colonizers. They have shared the same trenches with
us in the struggle against colonialism,
underdevelopment, and apartheid…We vow never to
forget this unparalleled example of selfless
internationalism." This is a good reminder for those
who yesterday and today talk of the Cuban "invasion"
of Angola.
Cuba paid an enormous price for this
noble act of international solidarity which, as
Mandela noted, was the turning point of the struggle
against racism in Africa. From 1975 to 1991, close
to 450,000 Cuban men and women served in Angola,
risking their lives. Over 2,600 died fighting to
defeat the racist regime of Pretoria and its allies.
The death of the extraordinary leader who was Nelson
Mandela provides an excellent opportunity to honor
their battle and, additionally, the internationalist
heroism of Fidel and the Cuban Revolution.