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Africa: Behold the New Africa - Sixth Annual Nelson Mandela Lecture Presented by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
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Nelson Mandela Foundation (Johannesburg)
DOCUMENT
12 July 2008
Posted to the web 13 July 2008
Johannesburg
Our revered President Mandela, our sister Graça Machel, distinguished ladies and gentlemen:
What an honor it is to be standing before His Excellency, Nelson Mandela, to deliver the 6th Annual Nelson Mandela Lecture here at Walter Sisulu Square in Kliptown, Soweto. What an honour to follow all the many sterling persons who have given this speech before me.
President Mandela on the occasion of your 90th birthday, I would like to pay tribute to you, a man who paved the way for a new generation of leaders and the emergence of democratization in Africa where, through free and fair elect or other processes, authority is transferred peacefully from one civilian government to another; where issues and hope, not fear for the future, define the national debate; where equality of women is a right and women's agencies supported and utilized; where governments invest in basic services like health and education, for all; where there is respect for individual and human rights; where there is a vibrant and open media; where economic growth is driven by entrepreneurs and the private sector; where open markets and trade define interactions with traditional donor nations; And finally and more importantly, where leaders are accountable to their people.
We admire you, President Mandela; for returning justice and democracy to your country, South Africa, and in doing so, for becoming an inspiration for Africans and for peoples the world over. You have taught us that if one believes in compassion for humanity we can all make a difference.
South Africa is a young democracy that has set a high standard for the continent in terms of its focus on constitutionalism, human rights and democracy. In preparation for its democracy, South Africa made strides in institution creation, including enshrining a Constitution with an ambitious and far-reaching human rights agenda and establishing the Chapter 9 institutions, namely, the Human Rights Commission, Youth Commission, and Gender Commission. As part of the democratic process, South Africa strengthened the media and ensured freedom of information. This country, your country, has led the way in establishing principles for an effective parliament, a fair and transparent judiciary and a transformed legal system.
Many Africans draw on the South African experience to infuse thinking about our present and our future. There has been a long history of engagement in African institutional fora, that seeks to craft a more positive future for our continent. South Arica has contributed to this effort in no small measure.
We thank you President Mandela for your foresight and leadership in providing the stewardship to that process, much of which was achieved through collective effort and built on years of sacrifice and yearning.
Our physical presence in Kliptown is also remarkable. When in 1955 the Freedom Charter proclaimed a bold development manifesto for South Africa and confirmed that the benefits were to be shared by "all who live in South Africa" it set a remarkably high standard for the government and peoples of this country. At that time, Kliptown was described as dusty and windy – look at it now! Soweto itself brings both tears and joy – the many lives lost and the many shining lives – for example Tsietsi Mashini, a leader of the critical student demonstrations, who fled and found safety in Liberia and married one of my compatriots, sadly died before he could see this marvelous time. Soweto has a special meaning for the young people of Liberia, some of them now old, for it inspired them in countless ways. What is more, Soweto has a special meaning for Africa, for here in this place two giants of Africa, two pillars of the African struggle, two Nobel Laureates, yourself, President Mandela and the loved Archbishop Tutu – lived on the same street, worked and raised your families here and became two Nobel Laureates, symbolizing the victory of your struggle.
Dear Friends, ten years ago, in his landmark speech in 1998 at the African Renaissance Conference in Johannesburg, then Executive Deputy President Thabo Mbeki called for a revival of the African Renaissance; a renewal of the African spirit; the ushering in of a threshold of a new era. In doing so, he stood on the shoulders of many others, women and men, who dreamed and worked for this in years gone by.
He said, and I quote, "the beginning of our rebirth as a continent must be our own rediscovering of our soul, captured and made permanently available in the great works of creativity represented by the pyramids and the sphinxes of Egypt, the stone buildings of Axum, the ruins of Carthage and Zimbabwe, the rock paintings of the San, the Benin bronzes and the African masks, the rock paintings, the coverings of the Makondes and the stone sculptures of the Shona. A people capable of such creativity must be its own liberator from the conditions which seek to describe our continent and its people as a poverty stricken and disease ridden primitives in a world riding the crest of a wave of progress and human upliftment".
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It has been a long and torturous road toward that revival - from the destroyed kingdoms of Mali and Hausa and Yoruba and Benin in the West; Bantu in the Center; Zimbabwe and Monopolapa in the South; from the slave trade and the balkanization of colonialism, from the liberation struggles of Kwame Nkrumah, Sekou Toure, Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, Jomo Kenyatta and you Madiba; from the boom of the 60s and the bust of the 80s to the sobering and challenging time of today.
I read our Madam's lecture in its entirety. It was well written and I assumed well delivered, but I wonder if the subject matter fits the occasion. Shouldn't this this lecture be about Mandela's accomplishment and how we can model his courage and bravery to make africa better? I like the speech, but I'm not sure if it suits the occasion.
Gehgan, the speech perfectly suits the occasion. It gave a snap shot where South Africa came from and whaht it's now, all this under the struggles then the leadership on Madiba. She goes on and assimilate thoses transformations to the mutation that is happening now IN DIFFERENT countries in the continent; in term of democracy, economic policies and many others social policies. She actually invited the Africans leaders to follow the steps of the former President Mandela to put their people first in leading their country. She raised an important issue talking about security or troubles in one country. No... [Read Full Text]
The speech was inspiring! I pray for Africa and her sons and daughters (my Brothers and Sisters)! We African people, regardless of where we are,whether in Africa, America, Carribean, etc. If Africa moves closer toward peace and unity, we all will move closer toward peace and unity. This is what we need!
Many of these comments remind me of psuedo Pan Africanists here in America who are apologists for many African misleaders. We as Black people must be willing to face up to the fact that a succession of African heads of state have been utter failures. Ellen is not anti-male. She is trying to inject gender balance and what we are seeing is a backlash from men who prefer to continue to dominate women and are insecure in their own right. The tone of the lecture was most appropriate and she made it appear as a tribute to Mandela while pointing... [Read Full Text]
I was personally very impressed with Johnson' speech. a well presented speech that made me appreciate this lady. africa needs many women of her calibre to lead it towards the unity it is earning for.
Behold, Join the Jokers Club, Welcome! A new generation of Afrakan leaders emerging in Afraka where through demoncracy, the likes of zombies such as Sirleaf Johnsons are fairly and freely elected into office? What?
And finally and more importantly, where leaders are accountable to their people? Sirleaf Johnson should be more specific and tell us what she means by accountability! For what most of us, all we see is some sort of accountability of these neo-colonialist puppets to their slave bosses for a part on their shoulders.
Sirleaf's double talks are no laughing matter! This is the same woman, who... [Read Full Text]
Oops! we should've kown that Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was only presenting a lecture for Mr. Nelson Mandela's foundation!! We thought that madam was serious in her prersentation about "accountability"!!
What poor and ignorant comments by "issinstitute", clearly driven by personal agendas, political or economical, or by his/her own puppet-masters. I happened to have the pleasure of attending the lecture, and the President was warmly received, her views respected, and the admiration and respect towards her and her country greatly enhanced. More African leaders should follow her views, and more Africans should heed her advice. More leaders like her in Africa could greatly turn around the continent's woes, without having to sell out its resources to so-called emerging econonies from other continents... Stand behing her. ... [Read Full Text]
This woman have no understand of west double standard of the west and have no knowledge of west politics in african she just madam follow follow she have no were in african politics, I think she can be better in kitchen or in bed she should go away . She can only advise her boy friend who help him to be president Olusegun Obansajo there all tupid people them have no vission for african only follow white wicked people
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