Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Happy Birthday Nelson Mandela


Nelson Mandela celebrates his 94th birthday today and will be honoured all over the world.
Mr Mandela became South Africa’s first black president in 1994 after fighting racist apartheid rule.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner spent 27 years in prison for his fight against white minority rule before being released in 1990.
He is officially retired and his public appearances have become increasingly rare – his last being at South Africa’s World Cup in 2010.
His birthday is known around the world as Mandela Day and to celebrate this a team of celebrities including One Direction, Lewis Hamilton and Eddie Izzard are encouraging people to devote 67 minutes of their time to community service in recognition of Mandela's 67 years of service.

To commemorate his remarkable life, we’ve collated 94 images of Mandela throughout the ages.
Across the country, and even abroad, people are doing good deeds to honor the country's most famous statesman on his birthday.
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton got the celebrations off to an early start Tuesday.
He and daughter Chelsea met for 1 ½ hours with Mandela in his birth village of Qunu in a remote, southeastern corner of the country.
Photographs tweeted by one of Mandela's grandsons showed the Nobel Peace Prize winner comfortably seated in an armchair with a blanket over his knees and with the Clintons and his wife, Graca Machel, at his side.


Then Clinton, Chelsea and Machel each planted an avocado pear tree to mark the occasion. Clinton said he is fond of the trees, an African symbol of growth and sustenance.
Children will begin their school day Wednesday by singing Happy Birthday to Madiba, the clan name by which Mandela is fondly known.
South Africans of all colors to whom Mandela is a hero came up with creative ways to do 67 minutes of community service.

Many volunteers will be collecting books, distributing sanitary pads and cleaning up neighborhoods.
In Pretoria, a tattoo parlor is hoping to tattoo clients with 67 images of MandelaÕs face, with proceeds going to charity.
On Constitution Hill Saturday, artist James Delaney used coffee cups to create a mosaic of Mandela.
Asked what would be the best gift for Mandela, Nobel laureate Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu said the greatest gift the nation could give would be "to emulate his magnanimity and grace."

"Mr. Mandela taught us to love ourselves, to love one another and to love our country," Tutu said.
Mandela's 50-year fight, including 27 years in jail, helped bring democracy and freedom to the once white-ruled South Africa. But the country remains beset by tensions over continued white minority domination of the economy, massive unemployment, poor education and health services and the millions who remain homeless or in shacks.
When Mandela's African National Congress won power in 1994, the housing shortage was a priority.
Eighteen years in, informal settlements without electricity and running water have ballooned and the lack of adequate housing for the poor is at crisis point, said Kate Tissington, a senior researcher at the Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa.
"You get the sense from government officials that there is a never-ending battle to eliminate the housing backlog," she said.
Some 3 million homes have been built for some of South Africa's 50 million people, according to Xolani Xundu, spokesman for the government Department of Human Settlements. But 2.2 million more homes are needed, he said.
Tissington said population growth and the influx of people into cities and towns have contributed to the crisis.
The high demand and low supply makes informal settlements, like Nhlapo's shack at Orange Farm, a viable option.
Government-subsidized housing, often built on cheaper vacant land on the outskirts of urban developments, is not always linked to bus routes or services such as clinics, making it even more difficult for people to survive.

Corruption is another factor undermining efforts, as sometimes people who do not necessarily qualify end up being allocated subsidized housing, Tissington said. This creates a lot of tension.
"A lot has been happening in political and policy circles over the years," Tissington said, "but implementation on the ground has not kicked in and people are getting increasingly impatient with living with compromised access to basic services."
Every day there are protests, sometimes violent, against the lack of housing and other basic services like electricity and potable water.
Ryan Horsfield, a volunteer who had taken two days off work to help build the homes at Orange Farm, believes citizens also have a role to play.
"I don't think it's up to us to sit back and say the government must do it or not. If something is not happening we should all get in and try make it happen," he said.
Which is exactly what Mandela had in mind when he retired from politics at age 90 and told the world that "It's in your hands to make the world a better place."


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