South Africans are currently marking one year since the death of
Nelson Mandela with services, blasting vuvuzelas and a cricket match to
honour his enormous legacy as an anti-apartheid icon and global beacon
of hope.
An interfaith service kicked off the day’s events in Pretoria, at the
Freedom Park amphitheatre dedicated to the country’s liberation heroes.
“Twenty years of democracy has been possible because of Mandela,”The
iconic leader passed away at the age of 95 last year after a long
illness.
Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa led the three-minute silence in the
morning, followed by a friendly cricket match, dubbed the Mandela Legacy
Cup, between South Africa’s national rugby and cricket teams at 1300
GMT.
At the weekend, artists and performers will hold centre stage at the
Nelson Mandela Foundation, which has launched an exhibition in honour of
the life and work of its namesake.
Motorcyclists across the country have also been called on to dedicate
their traditional Sunday morning rides to the anti-apartheid hero.
A five-kilometre (three-mile) Nelson Mandela Remembrance Walk will be
held in Pretoria on December 13, passing some of the city’s historic
landmarks, including the Union Buildings, South Africa’s seat of
government.
The next day, the city’s inaugural marathon will dedicate its last mile to Madiba.
Mandela’s death was met with a worldwide outpouring of grief.
He set South Africa on a course towards reconciliation after he
emerged unbowed from nearly three decades in prison in 1990 and became
the country’s first president to be elected by universal suffrage in
1994.
His one-time jailer FW de Klerk, who shared the Nobel Peace Prize
with Mandela in 1993, called on South Africans to honour his legacy.
“Although Nelson Mandela is no longer physically with us his legacy remains to guide us,” he said in a statement.
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