Letters: Mandela and his legacy
Re “Anti-apartheid icon reconciled a nation,” Obituary, Dec. 6
Hearing of Nelson Mandela’s death and the sensation surrounding the passing of a major global statesman, I could just imagine him in jail all those years — celebrating so many birthdays behind bars and thinking he would probably die there.
If somebody had told him that his life would continue for a long time in a very beautiful way, that he would be released from prison and die at the age of 95 as one of the most beloved and famous politicians in the world, having served as the first president of a new South Africa, he might have found it impossible.
And yet it became his truth.
Kathryn Pisaro
Valencia
The legal system that mandated racial discrimination in South Africa was as grotesque a social system as its name was unpronounceable to the English-speaking tongue. Like many, I pronounced it “a-parth-ide.”
One day some 30 years ago, a white woman from South Africa studying at UCLA corrected me. She said: “No, it is pronounced ‘a-par-tate’; it rhymes with hate.”
From then on it was easy to remember — but hard to contemplate.
James Manifold
Claremont
They say we have lost a great man, a transformative figure. No, we have not lost Mandela. “Lost” implies we cannot find him. In fact, we know exactly where he is: He remains with us, at home, in our hearts.
Andrew Boyd
Eagle Rock
ALSO:
Letters: L.A. County jail failures
Letters: Another Ridley-Thomas rises
Letters: Contraceptive case and the law
More to Read
A cure for the common opinion
Get thought-provoking perspectives with our weekly newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.