Nelson Mandela is a big name, a very big one; it was marketed by Jews with
an agenda What made him worth the attention? Why did the
Main Stream Media
do such an enormous selling job on him?
Rian Malan, an Afrikaner
who knows
South Africa gives us some of the answers. Yes, Mandela was a member of the
South African Communist Party central committee; no surprises there. His
book, The Long Walk
to Freedom was ghost written by
Richard Stengel, an
editor of TIME who went on
to become the chief publicist for
Obama. Does this prove that Obama &
Stengel are
Marxists?
No, but it is very suggestive. Stengel did a cover up job on Mandela's communism, his
enthusiasm for
Dialectical Materialism but then so did the
BBC. Agenda first, truth nowhere. Research was done by
Professor Ellis.
From The Spectator Outside, the intrepid Mac turns the microscopic text into a
typescript and sends it to London, where it becomes the Higgs boson of
literary properties, known to exist but not seen since it passed into
the hands of the South African Communist Party, or SACP, in 1977. Years
pass; the mystery deepens. Mandela goes from being an obscure South
African prisoner to possibly the most famous living human, subject of
global adulation and a ghostwritten autobiography that sells 15 million.
His cult is such that prints of his hands are sold for thousands, and
yet the prison manuscript stays missing. Until last week, when Professor
Stephen Ellis of the University of Leiden sent out an email saying:
‘You’ll never guess what I’ve just found in the online archive of the
Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory.’
So yes, the lost manuscript has come back to us and, with it, a range
of fascinating questions. Why was it not published earlier? Why did it
surface now? And above all, what light does it shed on Mandela’s Awkward
Secret, first reported by Professor Ellis in 2011? Everyone thought Mandela was a known entity, but he turns out to have
led a double life, at least for a time. By day, he was or pretended to
be a moderate democrat, fighting to free his people in the name of
values all humans held sacred. But by night he donned the cloak and
dagger and became a leader of a fanatical sect known for its attachment
to the totalitarian Soviet ideal. When Ellis first aired this theory, it read like a Cold War thriller,
but when Mandela died last month, the African National Congress and the
SACP both issued statements confirming that it was true: at the time of
his arrest in 1962, Nelson Mandela was a member of the SACP’s innermost
central committee. It is common cause that the ANC decided in the 1960s to use Mandela
as the anti-apartheid movement’s official poster boy. He was the obvious
choice, a tall, clean-limbed tribal prince, luminously charismatic,
married to the telegenic Winnie, and reduced by cruel circumstance to
living martyrdom on a prison island. All you had to do was cleanse him
of the communist taint and Bob’s your uncle: four decades down the road,
you have the president of the USA getting weepy as he describes
Mandela’s lifelong struggle for ‘your freedom, your democracy’. There’s
no accounting for taste, but one wonders if Barack Obama would have said
that if he’d known his hero batted for the opposition during the Cold
War. ‘I hate all forms of imperialism, and I consider the US brand to be
the most loathsome and contemptible.’ ‘To a nationalist fighting oppression,
Dialectical Materialism is like a rifle, bomb or missile. Once I
understood the principle of dialectical materialism, I embraced it
without hesitation.’ ‘Unquestionably, my sympathies lay with Cuba [during the 1962 missile
crisis]. The ability of a small state to defend its independence
demonstrates in no uncertain terms the superiority of socialism over
capitalism.’ Our search for an answer must begin with Rick Stengel, a New York
journalist who is now President Obama’s undersecretary for public
diplomacy. In the 1980s, Stengel did a tour of duty in South Africa,
where he exhibited sensitivity to the hardships of black people and
enthusiasm for their ANC liberators, surely one of the factors that led
to his eventual appointment as Mandela’s ghostwriter. Among the raw materials he was given to work with was the prison
manuscript, a sprawling 637-page affair with many uneven passages and no
clear ending. Stengel proceeded to turn this sow’s ear into Long Walk
to Freedom, a blockbuster that considerably boosted the Mandela
legend and formed the basis for a movie of the same title, now doing
boffo box office around the planet. In what follows, there is an element of conjecture. Since Mr Stengel
is the ghostwriter of record, it seems logical to infer that he made the
changes, even if we have no other basis for saying so. Pending
clarification, let’s note that Stengel was a New York liberal who would
instantly have realised that stridency was undesirable, especially if it
sounded a bit Russian. Clearly those lines about the Cuban missile
crisis and the evils of Yankee imperialism had to go. Beyond that, the
changes are usually quite subtle — a quote dropped here, a shift in
emphasis there. Having read both manuscripts several times, I think it’s
fair to say that Stengel appears to have cleaned up Mandela’s act in
three critical areas. The first was his premature conversion to violence. Officially,
Mandela was a moderate black nationalist, clinging to hope of peaceful
change until it was extinguished by the Sharpeville massacre of 1960.
But in the prison memoir we find him plotting war as early as 1953, when
he sent a comrade on a secret mission to beg guns and money from Red
China, in flagrant violation of the ANC’s non-aligned and non-violent
stance. ‘I was bitter and felt ever more strongly that SA whites need another
Isandlwana,’ he explains. Driving around the country, Mandela constantly
imagines rural landscapes as battlefields and cities as places where one
day soon ‘the sweet air will smell of gunfire, elegant buildings will
crash down and streets will be splashed with blood’. These vivid quotes
did not make it into the bestseller. The second area is his endorsement of force against opponents. In
April 1958, the ANC called a three-day national strike which drew little
or no support and had to be called off in humiliating circumstances. In
Long Walk, Mandela notes that the strike was completely effective
in towns where it was enforced by violence or pickets. ‘I have always
resisted such methods,’ he says, but goes on to reason that coercion is
acceptable in cases where a dissident minority is blocking a majority.
‘A minority should not be able to frustrate the will of the majority,’
he concludes. But in the prison manuscript, he says the opposite. ‘This is not a
question of principle or wishful thinking,’ he says. ‘If force will
advance [the struggle], then it must be used whether or not the
majority agrees with us.’ Pardon my italics, but it’s important to
understand what you’re looking at here: the rewrite makes Mandela sound
reasonable. The original is Stalinism. Who determines the course of
struggle? It is the communist vanguard, imbued with higher wisdoms
derived from the gospel of dialectical materialism. And if the majority
talks back, they must be smashed. As they were in the final bloody phase
of the struggle here. And everywhere else in Planet Soviet. The third area of amendment involved errors of even-handedness. I
thought I knew South African history, but one section of the prison
manuscript surprised me. (The section beginning on page 304, if you must
know. The entire book is available at
http://specc.ie/longwalkms).
I’d heard of the Alexandra bus boycott of 1957, in which a determined
display of people power forced capitalists to withdraw a fare increase.
But I was totally ignorant of ANC-led boycotts against Langeberg, a
giant food-canning operation, and United Tobacco; both corporations were
forced to deal with African unions and grant wage increases. Emboldened, the ANC tackled cruel potato farmers, and brought them
down too. Soon it was organising consumer boycotts all over the country,
and often winning. At the same time, it was behind the ceaseless
protests against the pass laws for women while winning stunning
victories in the Treason Trial and elsewhere. The cost in ANC lives:
zero. ‘To the best of my knowledge,’ writes Mandela, ‘no individuals
[meaning political detainees] were isolated, forced to give information,
beaten up, tortured, crippled or killed’ prior to December 1961, when
the communists started their bombing campaign (see page 302). Clearly, this could not be allowed to stand. It spoils the plot
completely! So Stengel cut it, allowing Long Walk to soar towards
to its moral epiphany. Provoked beyond endurance by oppression, Mandela
convinces the ANC’s timid old guard that it is time to fight back. With
their blessing, he goes on to form MK, ‘military wing of the ANC’, which
launches a bombing campaign against non-human targets. If we are to believe Stephen Ellis and Irina Filatova, a Russian
historian who has also published on the subject, all of this is doubtful
or fabricated. The decision to go to war was actually taken by the
Communist party, meeting in a prosperous white suburb, in a marquee
where black Africans were outnumbered around two to one by white and
Indian intellectuals. ANC president Albert Luthuli did not endorse the
move to violence and MK [
Umkhonto we Sizwe ] was not the military wing of the ANC at all — it
was the sole creation of the Communist party, and everyone involved in
its high command was openly or secretly a communist. You will find nothing of this in Long Walk, of course.
Is that Stengel’s fault? I think not. Mandela’s secret was still a
secret in the early 1990s, and Stengel was a hired hand, taking
instructions from God knows who. I attempted to elicit a comment, but Mr
Stengel failed to get back to me. Another man who might be able to shed
light on the mystery is Mac Maharaj, the man who smuggled the original
out of prison, now a spokesman and adviser in the office of President
Zuma. But he didn’t return my calls either. We will therefore have to turn to Hollywood to complete this story. I
went to see the movie version of Long Walk to Freedom armed with
a pen and ready to fight yet another rearguard action for Afrikaner
honour, only to find myself disarmed by the director Justin Chadwick’s
take on the Mandela story. No one really expects movies to be true, and
this one certainly isn’t. It’s a fable about a brave man who sticks up
for what he believes in and, against all odds, wins in the end. Music
swells, titles roll and I must hide the fact that I am moved. (Yes, I am
a sucker.) Then I borrow an electronic copy of the script and run a search for
the word ‘communist’. Two scenes come up. In one, a white policeman
jostles Mandela while saying, ‘Ag, everyone knows you’re a bloody
communist!’ In another, a white police general appears at the scene of a
bombing and says, ‘This is the work of communist terrorists….’ Both cops
are clearly intended to be taken as racist buffoons. This is a perfect
distillation of the traditional left-liberal position on Mandela. For
decades it was gospel. Now, it’s inadvertently funny. Rian_Malan is affiliated to the Foundation for African
Investigative Reporters.
New light is shed on the president's politics, smoothed over in
'Long Walk to Freedom'
[ Notice the communist salute - so like the Nazi version - Editor ]
This is a story about Nelson Mandela, and it begins on Robben Island
in 1974. Prisoner number 466/64 is writing up his life story, working
all night and sleeping all day. Finished pages go to trusted
comrades who write comments and queries in the margins. The text is then
passed to one Laloo Chiba, who transcribes it in ‘microscopic’ letters
on to sheets of paper which are later inserted into the binding of
notebooks and carried off the island by Mac Maharaj when he is released
in 1976.....
This, then, is why Ellis and I were dizzy with excitement when the
prison manuscript turned up last week: here was a rich new source of
virgin material to be scanned for the smoking gun, the inside and untold
story of Mandela’s secret life as a communist plotter. Alas, the smoking
gun was not there. But the prison manuscript does offer insights into
the manner in which Mandela’s image has been manipulated over the
decades.
Whoa! That’s not Mandela, is it? Well, yes. These quotes come from
the prison manuscript, which turns out to be the first draft of Long
Walk to Freedom, Mandela’s famous 1994 autobiography. Much of the
first draft is carried forth into the finished book, but these
problematic quotes have vanished, along with several other outbreaks of
what can only be described as pro-communist harangue. What happened?