Former South African President and Nobel laureate Nelson Mandela
made the following speech to his nations parliament on May 10th, the
tenth anniversary of his inauguration.
Madam Speaker, Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces, Deputy
Speaker, Deputy Chairperson of the NCOP, Mister President, Deputy President,
Members of the Cabinet, Premiers, Honorable Members:
We are deeply moved and humbled by your magnanimous gesture in inviting
us to address this joint session of the two houses of parliament.
We are aware, Madam Speaker, that an exception to the standing rules
had to be made in order to allow a retired old pensioner, who is neither
a member of parliament nor the serving head of state of any country,
to address you. That all the parties represented in Parliament unanimously
consented to this extra-ordinary departure from the rules touches us,
not only for the honor it pays us but also for the spirit of our nation
that it speaks of.
We remember, Madam Speaker, that on this exact day ten years ago democratic
South Africa celebrated its ceremonial birth with the inauguration
of its first President and two Deputy Presidents. We recall the joy
and excitement of a nation that had found itself: the collective relief
that we had stepped out of our restrictive past and the expectant air
of walking into a brighter future.
The national climate was one of magnanimity and a great generosity
of spirit. As a people we were enormously proud of what we had achieved,
negotiating amongst ourselves a peaceful resolution to what was regarded
as one of the most intractable situations of conflict in the world.
We were not unaware of or blind to the extent, depth and gravity of
the challenges ahead of us as we set out on that day to transform,
reconstruct and develop our nation and our society. However, the overwhelming
feelings in those early days of democratic nationhood were of hope
and confidence.
We had miraculously as many said transcended the deep divisions
of our past to create a new inclusive democratic order; we had confidence
that as a nation we would similarly confront and deal with the challenges
of reconstruction and development.
Madam Speaker, this old man who was greatly honored by the nation
and parliament to be elected founding President of democratic South
Africa notes with immense satisfaction and pride today the persistence
and strengthening of that spirit of generosity, magnanimity and confident
hopefulness about the future of our nation.
Merely observing this parliament inspires national pride and confidence.
We, the people of South Africa, the Preamble to our Constitution states,
believe that South Africa belongs to all who live in it, united in
our diversity. The make-up of this Parliament confirms that the people
of South Africa had spoken in all its diversity, asserting the strength
of our unity in diversity.
Allow us, Madam Speaker to congratulate you, the Chairperson of the
National Council of Provinces and your deputies on your election to
these important and prestigious positions in our democracy. Parliament
is the voice of the people and you, the presiding officers, bear a
heavy responsibility in ensuring that that voice is clearly heard in
national affairs and that its role be protected and defended.
Similarly, our congratulations to all the members of parliament in
whom the nation has put its trust. Yours is the almost sacred duty
to ensure government by the people under the Constitution.
Madam Speaker, we also wish to extend congratulations to our President
and to those that he has appointed as members of his national Cabinet
and to the positions of provincial Premiers.
I have said it so often, but want to repeat it here at what must certainly
be the last time that parliament will bend its own rules to allow me
to address it: no President or Prime Minister in the history of this
country can claim to have done more for the people and the country
than has been achieved by President Thabo Mbeki.
He is a modest man and I know he would prefer that I do not sing his
personal praises, but his achievement as President and national leader
is the embodiment of what our nation is capable of. Public acknowledgement
of his achievements is to affirm ourselves as a nation, to assert the
confidence with which we face our national future and conduct ourselves
on the international stage.
Thank you, Mister President, for leading us with such vision and dedication
to your task. Assuming, Madam Speaker, that Parliament is not cavalier
about its own rules and that this is my last address to this House:
what do I wish for our democracy in this second decade that we have
entered?
Let us never be unmindful of the terrible past from which we come that
memory not as a means to keep us shackled to the past in a negative
manner, but rather as a joyous reminder of how far we have come and
how much we have achieved. The memory of a history of division and
hate, injustice and suffering, inhumanity of person against person
should inspire us to celebrate our own demonstration of the capacity
of human beings to progress, to go forward, to improve, to do better.
There are many theoretical debates about the meaning of democracy
that I am not qualified to enter into. A guiding principle in our search
for and establishment of a non-racial inclusive democracy in our country
has been that there are good men and women to be found in all groups
and from all sectors of society; and that in an open and free society
those South Africans will come together to jointly and co-operatively
realize the common good.
My wish is that South Africans never give up on the belief in goodness,
that they cherish that faith in human beings as a cornerstone of our
democracy. The first value mentioned under the founding principles
of our Constitution is that of human dignity.
We accord persons dignity by assuming that they are good, that they
share the human qualities we ascribe to ourselves. Historical enemies
succeeded in negotiating a peaceful transition from apartheid to democracy
exactly because we were prepared to accept the inherent capacity for
goodness in the other.
We live in a world where there is enough reason for cynicism and despair.
We watch as two of the leading democracies, two leading nations of
the free world, get involved in a war that the United Nations did not
sanction; we look on with horror as reports surface of terrible abuses
against the dignity of human beings held captive by invading forces
in their own country.
We see how the powerful countries all of them democracies manipulate
multilateral bodies to the great disadvantage and suffering of the
poorer developing nations. There is enough reason for cynicism and
despair.
But then we should take heart from our own experience and performance.
Let us refrain from chauvinistic breast-beating; but let also not underrate
what we have achieved in establishing a stable and progressive democracy
where we take freedoms seriously; in building national unity in spite
of decades and centuries of apartheid and colonial rule; in creating
a culture in which we increasingly respect the dignity of all.
In a cynical world we have become an inspiration to many. We signal
that good can be achieved amongst human beings who are prepared to
trust, prepared to belief in the goodness of people.
Poverty, unemployment, preventable disease and ill-health, and other
forms of social deprivation continue to blot our landscape as we strive
to give content to the democratic commitment of a better life for all.
Nothing impairs the dignity of a person so much as not being able to
find work and gainful employment. HIV/Aids continues to threaten our
future in a particularly frightening manner.
Our democracy must bring its material fruits to all, particularly
the poor, marginalized and vulnerable. Our belief in the common good
ultimately translates in to a deep concern for those that suffer want
and deprivation of any kind.
We are inspired by the commitment that has emerged from all parties
that have participated in the past elections. This parliament, leading
into the second decade of democracy, promises to take seriously that
contract with the people to improve their lives.
We are impressed by the spirit of inclusiveness exuded by our legislature
and our executive. We are warmed by the spirit of generosity that continues
to characterize our nation and national efforts.
Madam Speaker, we thank Parliament for this opportunity to greet the
dawn of our second decade of democracy. We wish you well.
May God protect our people. Nkosi sikelel'i Afrika. Morena boloka
setjhaba sa heso. God seen Suid-Afrika. God bless South Africa. Mudzimu
thatutshedza Afurika. Hosi katekisa Afrika.