Nelson Mandela –
Nobel Lecture
Acceptance and Nobel Lecture
Your Majesty the King,
Your Royal Highness,
Esteemed Members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee,
Honourable Prime Minister, Madame Gro Harlem Brundtland, Ministers, Members
of Parliament and Ambassadors, Fellow Laureate, Mr. F.W. de Klerk, Distinguished
Guests,
Friends, Ladies and Gentlemen,
I extend my heartfelt thanks to the Norwegian Nobel Committee for elevating
us to the status of a Nobel Peace Prize winner.
I would also like to take this opportunity to congratulate my compatriot
and fellow laureate, State President F.W. de Klerk, on his receipt of
this high honour.
Together, we join two distinguished South Africans, the late Chief Albert
Lutuli and His Grace Archbishop Desmond Tutu, to whose seminal contributions
to the peaceful struggle against the evil system of apartheid you paid
well-deserved tribute by awarding them the Nobel Peace Prize.
It will not be presumptuous of us if we also add, among our predecessors,
the name of another outstanding Nobel Peace Prize winner, the late Rev
Martin Luther King Jr.
He, too, grappled with and died in the effort to make a contribution to
the just solution of the same great issues of the day which we have had
to face as South Africans.
We speak here of the challenge of the dichotomies of war and peace, violence
and non-violence, racism and human dignity, oppression and repression
and liberty and human rights, poverty and freedom from want.
We stand here today as nothing more than a representative of the millions
of our people who dared to rise up against a social system whose very
essence is war, violence, racism, oppression, repression and the impoverishment
of an entire people.
I am also here today as a representative of the millions of people across
the globe, the anti-apartheid movement, the governments and organisations
that joined with us, not to fight against South Africa as a country or
any of its peoples, but to oppose an inhuman system and sue for a speedy
end to the apartheid crime against humanity.
These countless human beings, both inside and outside our country, had
the nobility of spirit to stand in the path of tyranny and injustice,
without seeking selfish gain. They recognised that an injury to one is
an injury to all and therefore acted together in defense of justice and
a common human decency.
Because of their courage and persistence for many years, we can, today,
even set the dates when all humanity will join together to celebrate one
of the outstanding human victories of our century.
When that moment comes, we shall, together, rejoice in a common victory
over racism, apartheid and white minority rule.
That triumph will finally bring to a close a history of five hundred years
of African colonisation that began with the establishment of the Portuguese
empire.
Thus, it will mark a great step forward in history and also serve as a
common pledge of the peoples of the world to fight racism, wherever it
occurs and whatever guise it assumes.
At the southern tip of the continent of Africa, a rich reward in the making,
an invaluable gift is in the preparation for those who suffered in the
name of all humanity when they sacrified everything - for liberty, peace,
human dignity and human fulfillment.
This reward will not be measured in money. Nor can it be reckoned in the
collective price of the rare metals and precious stones that rest in the
bowels of the African soil we tread in the footsteps of our ancestors.
It will and must be measured by the happiness and welfare of the children,
at once the most vulnerable citizens in any society and the greatest of
our treasures.
The children must, at last, play in the open veld, no longer tortured
by the pangs of hunger or ravaged by disease or threatened with the scourge
of ignorance, molestation and abuse, and no longer required to engage
in deeds whose gravity exceeds the demands of their tender years.
In front of this distinguished audience, we commit the new South Africa
to the relentless pursuit of the purposes defined in the World Declaration
on the Survival, Protection and Development of Children.1
The reward of which we have spoken will and must also be measured by the
happiness and welfare of the mothers and fathers of these children, who
must walk the earth without fear of being robbed, killed for political
or material profit, or spat upon because they are beggars.
They too must be relieved of the heavy burden of despair which they carry
in their hearts, born of hunger, homelessness and unemployment.
The value of that gift to all who have suffered will and must be measured
by the happiness and welfare of all the people of our country, who will
have torn down the inhuman walls that divide them.
These great masses will have turned their backs on the grave insult to
human dignity which described some as masters and others as servants,
and transformed each into a predator whose survival depended on the destruction
of the other.
The value of our shared reward will and must be measured by the joyful
peace which will triumph, because the common humanity that bonds both
black and white into one human race, will have said to each one of us
that we shall all live like the children of paradise.
Thus shall we live, because we will have created a society which recognises
that all people are born equal, with each entitled in equal measure to
life, liberty, prosperity, human rights and good governance.
Such a society should never allow again that there should be prisoners
of conscience nor that any person's human right should be violated.
Neither should it ever happen that once more the avenues to peaceful change
are blocked by usurpers who seek to take power away from the people, in
pursuit of their own, ignoble purposes.
In relation to these matters, we appeal to those who govern Burma that
they release our fellow Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Aung San Suu Kyi,
and engage her and those she represents in serious dialogue, for the benefit
of all the people of Burma.2
We pray that those who have the power to do so will, without further delay,
permit that she uses her talents and energies for the greater good of
the people of her country and humanity as a whole.
Far from the rough and tumble of the politics of our own country. I would
like to take this opportunity to join the Norwegian Nobel Committee and
pay tribute to my joint laureate. Mr. F.W. de Klerk.
He had the courage to admit that a terrible wrong had been done to our
country and people through the imposition of the system of apartheid.
He had the foresight to understand and accept that all the people of South
Africa must through negotiations and as equal participants in the process,
together determine what they want to make of their future.
But there are still some within our country who wrongly believe they can
make a contribution to the cause of justice and peace by clinging to the
shibboleths that have been proved to spell nothing but disaster.
It remains our hope that these, too, will be blessed with sufficient reason
to realise that history will not be denied and that the new society cannot
be created by reproducing the repugnant past, however refined or enticingly
repackaged.
We would also like to take advantage of this occasion to pay tribute to
the many formations of the democratic movement of our country, including
the members of our Patriotic Front, who have themselves played a central
role in bringing our country as close to the democratic transformation
as it is today.
We are happy that many representatives of these formations, including
people who have served or are serving in the "homeland" structures,
came with us to Oslo. They too must share the accolade which the Nobel
Peace Prize confers.
We live with the hope that as she battles to remake herself, South Africa,
will be like a microcosm of the new world that is striving to be born.
This must be a world of democracy and respect for human rights, a world
freed from the horrors of poverty, hunger, deprivation and ignorance,
relieved of the threat and the scourge of civil wars and external aggression
and unburdened of the great tragedy of millions forced to become refugees.
The processes in which South Africa and Southern Africa as a whole are
engaged, beckon and urge us all that we take this tide at the flood and
make of this region as a living example of what all people of conscience
would like the world to be.
We do not believe that this Nobel Peace Prize is intended as a commendation
for matters that have happened and passed.
We hear the voices which say that it is an appeal from all those, throughout
the universe, who sought an end to the system of apartheid.
We understand their call, that we devote what remains of our lives to
the use of our country's unique and painful experience to demonstrate,
in practice, that the normal condition for human existence is democracy,
justice, peace, non-racism, non-sexism, prosperity for everybody, a healthy
environment and equality and solidarity among the peoples.
Moved by that appeal and inspired by the eminence you have thrust upon
us, we undertake that we too will do what we can to contribute to the
renewal of our world so that none should, in future, be described as the
"wretched of the earth".3
Let it never be said by future generations that indifference, cynicism
or selfishness made us fail to live up to the ideals of humanism which
the Nobel Peace Prize encapsulates.
Let the strivings of us all, prove Martin Luther King Jr.
to have been correct, when he said that humanity can no longer be tragically
bound to the starless midnight of racism and war.
Let the efforts of us all, prove that he was not a mere dreamer when he
spoke of the beauty of genuine brotherhood and peace being more precious
than diamonds or silver or gold.
Let a new age dawn!
Thank you.
1. The Declaration of the Rights of the Child, approved unanimously by
the United Nations General Assembly on 20 November 1959, proclaimed ten
fundamental rights, including those Mandela mentions. .
2. Aung San Suu Kyi was granted the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize. See pp. 1-21.
3. "Arise, ye wretched of the earth" is a line in the English
version of the Internationale, a revolutionary socialist hymn written
in Paris in 1871 and sung thereafter by socialists and communists.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1991-1995, World Scientific Publishing Co.,
Singapore
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