Listen to 'Remembering Walter Sisulu'
Remembering Anti-Apartheid Activist Walter Sisulu - 2003-05-16
This weekend [17 May 2003], South Africans bury veteran anti-apartheid
activist Walter Sisulu, who died last week, just 12 days before his 91st
birthday. VOA's Delia Robertson knew Mr. Sisulu, and sent us these personal
memories.
I watched silently as the tall white man reached out his hand and, his
voice choked with emotion, thanked the short black man for all he had
sacrificed for his country. The short man pulled the tall man towards him and
wrapped his arms around him in a sustained and vigorous hug.
The short black man was Walter Sisulu and the tall white man, my father,
Duncan Robertson. It was a year since Walter Sisulu's release from jail in
October 1989, and since I had first met him and also received one of his famous
introductory hugs. In that year, like many other South Africans, I had learned
to love him as a second father, and felt privileged to call him Ntate, or
father, Sisulu.
And so I was thrilled when my parents asked to meet Ntate and his wife,
Albertina, or Ma Sisulu, whom I had known for several years before her
husband's release. During that memorable visit in their small Soweto home, the
Sisulus told my parents they would just have to get used to sharing me,
because, they said, she is now our daughter, too.
I was not the first, nor would I be the last, to be so honored. The
Sisulus were renowned for drawing people into the ever-expanding embrace of
their love. Amina Cachalia, a veteran anti-apartheid activist who knew Walter
Sisulu for 50 years, told me he was the kind of person who drew people to him.
"Walter was just such a teddy bear type of personality," she said.
"Somebody that you just wanted to hug all the time. Even when I met him
first he gave me that impression. But he was a wonderful, soft, gentle man to
sit and talk to about anything. And you felt he was like yourself, an ordinary
guy that you could talk to, and yet, he had quite a mind and quite a vision
that he always tried to instill in others and talk to others quietly about. He
was an unassuming sort of a chap, and yet, he had this quality of getting over
[conveying] what he believed in and what he wanted others to believe in."
I once asked Ntate Sisulu how, given his treatment at the hands of the
white apartheid government, he was able to show such warmth to white people,
whom he had never previously met, why he seemed so free of any bitterness.
"We were not fighting the white man to go to the sea," he said.
"No, we were fighting for the system. We must participate, we must have a
share in the affairs of this nation. And to be bitter, therefore, would be to
defeat my basis, my very development, and, therefore, I must avoid becoming
anti-white."
His friend, Amina Cachalia told me, the foundation of both the private
and the political Walter Sisulu was his absolute belief that all people are
equal. "Complete non-racialism and a coming together of all people, all
the time, to carry on the democracy that he helped [bring] about," she
said. "I think his legacy is enormous, and if we can carry on and imbibe
that legacy, we will be better people in South Africa."
In June 1964, along with his dearest friend, Nelson Mandela, and five
others, Walter Sisulu was given a life sentence for sabotage. He was the first
defendant in what is now famously known as the Rivonia treason trial, which
lasted a year from their arrest at Liliesleaf farm in Rivonia on the northern
outskirts of Johannesburg.
Walter Sisulu's long road to jail began in the eastern Cape Province of
South Africa, where he was born on May 18, 1912. His mother was Alice Sisulu, a
black domestic worker, and his father a white magistrate, Victor Dickenson. The
relationship between his parents lasted several years, and although his father
helped the family financially for a few years, he never acknowledged either
Walter, nor his younger sister, Rosabella. Their maternal uncle, the village
headman, acted as their father.
The uncle's death when Walter was 15-years-old and in grade six forced
him to leave school and head for Johannesburg, where he got work in a dairy.
Several different jobs followed. He was a domestic worker, a factory worker
and, for a time, he worked in a bakery, from which he was fired for organizing
a strike for higher wages. Continued clashes with a range of employers over
union activities ultimately led to him becoming a self-employed estate agent.
His union activities brought Walter into contact with the African
National Congress, which he joined in 1940. Nine years later, he was elected
secretary general. It was during this period that he met Nelson Mandela, became
his political mentor and recruited him into the ANC. Walter told me that he
immediately recognized the potential in Mr. Mandela, and, as he did with so
many other political leaders of the period, he pushed South Africa's future
president toward leadership roles. "Well, first of all, he meets me,"
said Walter Sisulu. "He was a much younger man. He meets me already in the
movement, and in that way, I am influencing the direction, and we discuss
naturally with him. Then, I was dealing with a man who was bright himself - he
had ideas."
But the Afrikaner-dominated Nationalist Party had come to power in 1948,
and introduced statutory racism in the form of apartheid. In the ensuing years,
Walter Sisulu was in the forefront of peaceful protests such as the Defiance
Campaign of 1952. For these and other acts Mr. Sisulu and other senior ANC
leaders were charged in December 1956 with treason. They were acquitted nearly
five years later.
Three months after that, Mr. Sisulu and other ANC leaders decided to
escalate the fight against apartheid to an armed struggle, and established the
armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto we Sizwe, or Spear of the Nation. It was not
long before he and his colleagues were operating underground, and, in July
1963, he was arrested in Rivonia, and for the second time, tried for treason.
It is not possible to speak of Walter Sisulu, without also mentioning
his wife Albertina, or Ma Sisulu. They were South Africa's most loved couple.
But Ma Sisulu was an activist in her own right, and, as Amina Cachalia reminded
me, kept their family together, even though she, too, suffered severely at the
hands of apartheid's enforcers. "But of course, Albertina had the brunt of
the separation, and she really missed him all the years," said Amina
Cachalia. "And hers was such a tremendous responsibility, to keep that
family together, [she was] sometimes in jail, and sometimes away, and sometimes
being tortured, and he in prison. So, it was tremendous loss for her, and I
think, if anybody deserved a better deal, it would be Albertina."
Walter told me that no other woman came close to Albertina. "When I
took up the position of being a secretary general, that very night I knew,
finished with me," he said. "I can't go to business, I can't be
employed, I've got a duty to the people. Changed my whole approach. What was I
going to depend on? I was not paid a salary, I wasn't going to earn anything. I
depended on my wife. I say remarkable, because, with no means, she was able to
keep the family together."
Walter Sisulu was former President Mandela's dearest friend and the man
Mr. Mandela constantly reached out to for support and advice. Using Mr.
Sisulu's clan name, the former president said Walter was a man of rare
humanity. "Xhamela has never been president of the ANC," he said. "He
had never been a member of parliament. He has never been honored as some of us
were honored. Nevertheless, he stood a head and shoulders above all of us. What
was the reason for this? Because he had the gift of humility."
Ntate Sisulu's humanity has continued to touch new people in the
aftermath of his death, with television shows and radio talk shows dominated by
discussion of his life. Amina Cachalia told me that many white South Africans
have approached her to say they now have new insights into the anti-apartheid
struggle. "But the people that talked to me the other day said it had
opened up a new understanding for them, the man's death, and what he had stood
for, and what he had done, and the legacy he has left for the people and, these
were all white people - that they've understood things better," she said.
"And I said, well, if Walter could have done that in death as much as he
did it to us in the earlier days, then his legacy is tremendously
important."
Walter Sisulu's legacy, his sacrifices and his work for democracy in
South Africa are well documented, and will become a part of history. But his
friend and fellow activist Amina Cachalia says his death reminds us that the
generation that offered forgiveness to end oppression is passing from our
midst. Hamba kahle Ntate Sisulu - farewell Walter.
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