Monday, 9 December 2013

Monday Mumbling



The milder weather, only two pullovers on today, brought me a visitor this afternoon. Taking his ease on the grubby window a butterfly enjoyed the view through the dirt ingrained pane.  My pondering as to whether he was better off inside or out ended after I downloaded the pics I took, almost all out of focus, and returned to find he had disappeared.  I suspect he realised he would starve to death in here and hopped it towards the park.  Can he survive the winter I wonder?  Will such a frail creature endure the cold?  If only he had turned around and rested on the pane, then I may have obtained a better shot and worked out what he was called.  



You might have picked up from the news, if you had been listening carefully, that Mandela had died.  Being unwell, ninety five years of age, and quite famous I thought we might hear more about him hmmm?  I liked this man.  He was no messiah as some appear to reckon him, he was not even a great president, he was however a great man!  Having spent so many years in jail it meant his ability as leader was limited.  Others were in powerful positions and he himself was not as young as he had been, his close knowledge and awareness of his people were now limited by the long separation.  However with one magnificent gesture, offering forgiveness and reconciliation, he avoided a possible civil war, with the attending bloodbath, and set about creating a new nation.
It has not happened, with the present generation of leaders it will never happen, and the poorest still face unending struggles and dangers day by day. Many have found life much improved, others find life has more dangers.  I had a run in with a chap who considers all TV as 'anti-white,' this Afrikaner is willing to tell of the many whites killed by black folks, but forgets the oppression of the past couple of centuries.  He and I did not get on.  For many whites South Africa is indeed a dangerous place, not all see things his way however.
There has been a certain amount of idol worship around Mandela in the past few days, this is wrong, and he would object to this.  He ought to be seen as the man who saved South Africa, donning a 'Springbok' shirt to do so, encouraging reconciliation and forgiveness, which may well have been hard for him inside, and setting forth a positive view of a new nation.  This did not make him a messiah, but as I said, it made him a great man, and he ought to be regarded as such.



Saturday saw the town centre awash with Christmas shoppers. naturally a donkey, plus two sheep, appeared in town.  Cynics may say the last thing we need is another donkey wandering about here, but I say nothing.  As you do folks were attempting to pet the animals, and as they do they just wanted someone to shove hay in their mouths.  I think the animals came off best here.  I note that a 'Morocco Market' was arranged by one town but fell through at the last minute as the Moroccans could not get visa's, just in case they did not go home again, and the camels got stuck on the motorway!  Whether the brutes were walking or using the bus was not made clear, the camels I mean, not the Moroccans.     

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4 comments:

Jenny Woolf said...

I agree that Mandela was a great man, they only come once in a generation. He can't have been perfect.
Another reason that you can tell he was great was that all the politicians are tripping over themselves to make the point that he was their best friend. or secret best friend at any rate.

Love the way the donkey isn't taking any interest in being photographed. It looks as if it is almost inside the shop.

the fly in the web said...

Very sad to see what South Africa has become under his sucessors, Mbeki and the egregious Zuma.
He chose reconciliation over progress for the underprivileged....looking to the future with hopes that these two have firmly dashed.

Adullamite said...

Jenny, Indeed they all want to be seen as his friend! How they struggle for the best seats!
The animals cared little for the occasion on Saturday!

Fly, Lining their pockets as African leaders do. I am so glad our leaders are so honest.......what?......oh!

Lee said...

Yes...Mandela was a great man.

Unfortunately, it takes more than one great man to change a nation...to change the world.

How wonderful it would be if the people of the world followed Mandela's example and forged forth through the gate he opened...and along the path he laid. How great it would be if they honoured his memory by doing so.

It is up to the people of this world to make this a reality to do so; not to do so dishonours what Mandela stood for, and what his memory will continue standing for.

One man solely can’t change the world, but many in honour of Mandela’s achievements and dreams could succeed.

If only.....