Nelson Mandela died a year ago today. History remembers him for many things, all of which are humbling and inspiring. He spent 27 years in jail. He saw countless friends die or suffer under the indignities of apartheid. He quietly persevered, knowing history supported him, knowing that a just world could not accept the injustices of South Africa. And slowly he won. Slowly the world came to recognize the power of this slight man with his gentle voice.
Last year, following news of his death, I listened to countless news stories about Mandela as the world tried to figure out what to make of his legacy. And one thing that struck me was how he forgave his tormentors. In fact, he invited F.W. De Klerk — his main oppressor and the man who stood for everything he opposed — to his presidential inauguration. I listened with awe to this. Mandela was an amazing person. I should be like him and forgive. Unfortunately, I don’t always live up to his example.
Mandela’s compassion is inspiring. I want to be that kind of person. I want to be magnanimous and kind. I want to let go of my attachment to fairness, to justice. But it’s hard for me. And so sometimes when I think about Mandela, I feel weak and flawed. I can never be as good a person as he was.
Mandela stood up for all the black people in South Africa, not just for one person. Not just for one person who died from a thrown rock. When I compare my story to his, I come off pretty badly. When I compare my story to so many tragedies in the world, I come off pretty badly.
I lost one man. A man who didn’t suffer in life, nor presumably did he suffer in death. In the grand scheme of things, our tragedy was really, really small. But I suffered. I struggled with my sense of injustice. And so I find myself looking for reasons that Mandela was able to be so good when I am so easily lost in my vindictiveness.
I think about his story and find myself arguing that he could afford to be magnanimous because he defeated his oppressors. Because the fact is Mandela won. No one likes De Klerk. No one thinks apartheid has any redeemable features. Everyone knows that the horrible things done to blacks under De Klerk can never be justified. So Mandela could invite De Klerk to his inauguration and, in doing so, rub De Klerk’s nose in his smelly, inglorious and utter defeat. De Klerk stood there embodying evil. Everyone looked at him with disgust and hatred. Everyone looked at Mandela with love and awe.
We cried over his words, wrote them down in journals and tried to emulate him in our daily lives. I did then and still do now. Mandela was and is an inspiration. He embodied a kind of grace and gentleness that we all aspire to. And yet … when I let my less-than-evolved self take over I can’t help but feel as if we overstated the meaning of his forgiveness. He forgave because something happened. His oppressors were proven to be wrong. If they did not exactly apologize, they paid for their wrong by losing their position and power. By falling from the pedestal they’d built for themselves as the controllers of South Africa.
I don’t mean to criticize Mandela or his legacy. I do mean to pick away at the meaning of forgiveness because I sometimes get tired of people holding it up as if it is the penultimate human action. Sure Jesus preached that we should turn the other cheek; but his father — the Christian God — spoke differently in the First Testament. Didn’t an eye for an eye come from the Bible? Isn’t the Bible rife with stories of vengeance? The whole First Testament teems with it. Sinners are struck down in Babylon, by Noah’s flood, by plagues and war. And it’s not only Christianity. That’s just the heritage I’m familiar with, but the desire to seek vengeance is universal. It crosses cultures, race and time. It’s not a pretty emotion, but it has had incredible power over the human race. Perhaps that is why Mandela’s compassion is so noteworthy. Most of us can’t live up to him. Most of us want vengeance.
Understanding the rage that drives us
When I was a young woman civil war broke out in what had been Yugoslavia. The unrest hit close to home. I’d been in Yugoslavia. It wasn’t an alien culture with an inaccessible belief system. The Serbs and Croats looked and acted like me. Therefore I couldn’t explain away their war by saying they were other. And yet their war defied my understanding.
It made no sense to me to watch people kill each other for what seemed like trivial differences. I tried to understand what it would take for me to behave like that — to want to kill my neighbor because he or she wore a headscarf or had a different color skin. But I couldn’t. I couldn’t imagine being driven by that kind of hatred or fear. I couldn’t imagine feeling so threatened by someone else that I wanted to kill him or her to protect myself or my family. I was too lucky, too sheltered. The whole idea felt alien. It’s not that I liked everyone in my community or even believed in the same things they believed, but I wasn’t going to kill them for their differences.
But after Avery was born, I realized that my world was more fragile than I thought. Suddenly I knew that I had something that I would sacrifice everything for. If someone threatened Avery, I think I might be able to kill him or her if that seemed to be my only recourse. And so I learned that even affluent, white, WASPy me — who lived far, far away from any war or terror, who could leave my house unlocked without fear, who could walk down the street at night alone without concern — even I could consider killing someone if that person touched the right nerve.
Of course that feeling was pretty abstract. I wasn’t really thinking about killing anyone, because I was safe. Avery was safe. Pete was safe. We were protected by money, skin color, a warm home, a big healthy family, more food than we needed and loving community. The fragility of this situation never occurred to me. I feared loss, but hadn’t really felt it and I certainly had never felt any great deprivation.
But Pete’s death roused some ugly, primal feelings in me. His death showed me I’d been incredibly naïve in thinking we were immune from tragedy, and it stirred up feelings of anger, fear and rage that I suspect were similar to the feelings that drove the civil war in the Balkans. That led to demonstrations in Fergusson, Missouri. The same rage that has caused endless suffering throughout the world.
I know what I need to do to get rid of these feelings. I know I need to look at people like Nelson Mandela, Gandhi, Christ, Mother Theresa, Buddha and others and emulate the lessons of their lives. I’ve been reading lots of stuff on forgiveness and releasing anger. I’ve been trying to meditate. And it’s helping. But it’s not easy. I keep find myself saying, “Of course that all makes sense, but….” And you know where that “but” goes — it goes to the unfairness, the injustice, that damn feeling of frustration that someone has gotten away with something at my expense.
Forgiving without the need for victory
If I had been Mandela, I think I would have felt vindicated by seeing De Klerk humbled and subservient at my inauguration. How glorious it must have felt to be the victor in such an incredible battle. How incredible it must have been for him to stand as a black man on the pinnacle of power in South Africa where before he’d been forced to ride black-only buses, where he’d been unable to vote or send his children to the best schools. Where he could not buy a house in certain neighborhoods even if he’d had the money. Where he’d spent a large part of his life behind bars. And then he was president. If that is not the ultimate revenge for 27 years in prison, I can’t imagine what else would be.
But I suspect Mandela really didn’t see it that way. The man I read about truly seems to have transcended my petty vindictiveness. He had found peace and with that peace, he forgave.
I’m trying. I’m trying to close my eyes and breath deeply rather than make a voodoo doll of my friend’s supervisor so I can stick pins in him. I know nothing positive will come from doing that. I know it. And yet … part of me still think it sounds pretty cathartic. Ugh. That’s the ugly part of myself that I need to work on. The ugly part of me that needs to remember Nelson Mandela.