After
10 days of sober and glamorous activities that attracted hundreds of
world leaders and celebrities from different continents, anti-apartheid
icon, Nelson Mandela will be buried today in his hometown, Qunu.
Ninety-one president are expected at the final burial. Since he died,
tributes have streamed from virtually every part of the planet,
celebrating South Africa’s first democratically elected president. Part
of the activities saw thousands queue to pay their last respect to
Madiba
Private burial
South Africans will not be able to see
Nelson Mandela’s remains being laid to rest, with his actual burial a
strictly private, family affair, a government spokesperson said on
Friday.
At least 5 000 people, including foreign
dignitaries and senior political figures, are expected to attend
Sunday’s funeral ceremony in Mandela’s boyhood home Qunu.
Once the initial public service has been
completed, however, the moment of interment will, at the family’s
request, be a purely private affair, spokesperson Phumla Williams told
AFP.
“The family has indicated they want to make the burial a family matter,” Williams said.
“They don’t want it to be televised. They don’t want people to see when the body is taken down.”
After three days of lying in state in the capital Pretoria, Mandela’s casket will be flown to Qunu early on Saturday morning.
A special stage and marquee have been erected for the two-hour public funeral service which begins at 8am on Sunday.
Preparations for former South African
President Nelson Mandela’s funeral at his family farm are complete, a
family spokesman said Thursday.
“At the moment, we are just awaiting for
safety engineers to inspect the tent and issue a safety certificate,”
family spokesman Bantu Holomisa said. “We are hoping that the weather
can clear today or tomorrow but we are happy with the work on the
ground.”
The weather is expected to clear by the funeral, set for Sunday.
Despite the consistent rain in the
village of Qunu, workers have completed building an arena, which is
expected to accommodate 4,000 guests, SAnews.gov.za reported.
According to www.upi.com, the arena overlooks the Mandela residence and is just a few feet away from where Mandela will be buried.
News 24 reported that workers Thursday tested sound equipment and caterers arrived.
Police and military personnel surround the residence and have been searching every vehicle.
Funeral arrangements
Also on Friday, the SA National Defence
Force said preparations for the state funeral of former president Nelson
Mandela was going on well.
“Everything is on track in terms of arrangements for the funeral,” spokesperson Lieutenant t-General XolaniMabangu said.
Friday was the third and final day in which Mandela’s body will lie in state at the Union Buildings in Pretoria.
The body was returned to One Military Hospital overnight and was flown to the Eastern Cape on Saturday.
“Tomorrow [Saturday] at the Waterkloof
Military Airbase… the body will be formally and officially handed over
to the ANC [for them] to conduct their ceremony in honour of him,” said
Mabangu.
He said chief mourners among the Madiba
clan and Mandela family, as well as senior government officials, would
accompany the body.
The New Age reported that all AbaThembu traditions would be observed once the body arrived at the Mthatha Airport on Saturday morning.
Spending for events
Julius Malema’s Economic Freedom Fighters
cautioned government on Friday against the excessive use of public
funds for commemorative events for former president Nelson Mandela.
“This must be vexing to the soul of a man
who always insisted on being humble, but also to always put the
vulnerable first,” spokesperson MbuyiseniNdlozi said in a statement.
“It cannot be that governments of
provinces, municipalities and the national government has been spending
on organising reparative events that include music concerts where
artists, events managers are taking home millions of public funds.”
The EFF said spending exorbitantly on events was not a good way to honour Mandela.
“It would not be justifiable that in the
end, when all is said and done, the total expenditure on commemorations
comes to billions of rands,” it said.
It also called for a planned music concert by the Gauteng government to be cancelled.
“Furthermore, EFF calls on municipalities
to subject themselves to provincial government memorial events. South
Africa must honour Mandela, and do so meekly.”
On Thursday, Malema, who was expelled as
the governing African National Congress Youth League president, visited
Mandela’s house in Houghton, and attended the lying in state in
Pretoria.
“Thank you [Mandela] for ushering in
political freedom… Those who came after you failed to deliver economic
freedom,” he said outside the house.
“We are picking up this battle…Viva the militant Nelson Mandela, viva,” he said.
Traditional burial rituals
Nelson Mandela will be laid to rest on
Sunday in an elaborate ceremony combining a state funeral and all its
military pomp with the traditional burial rituals of his Xhosa clan to
ensure he has an easy transition into the afterworld.
Many South Africans will revere Mandela,
who during his life became a global symbol of peace and reconciliation,
even more now that he has died, since ancestors are widely believed to
have a guiding, protective role over the living.
According to Reuters, around 46 per cent
of the population practises some form of traditional African religions,
according to a 2010 survey by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public
Life, a Washington-based research centre. The same report said 87 per
cent of South Africans self-identify as Christians and only four percent
as animists, meaning many combine beliefs and customs of Christianity
with their older tribal traditions.
He will be buried by his family following
their traditional burial rites on Sunday in Qunu, their ancestral home
in the rural Eastern Cape province, 700 km (450 miles) south of
Johannesburg.
If the rites are not carried out, the abaThembu believe the dead will come back in spirit to demand they are performed.
“We as Africans have rites of passage,
whether it is a birth, marriage or funeral. Mandela will be sent off
into the spiritual world so that he is welcomed in the world of
ancestors. And also so that he doesn’t get angry,” said NokuzolaMndende,
a scholar of African religion.
“His wrath won’t be on the state if these ceremonies don’t take place, it will be on his children,” Mndende said.
A man who for many embodied the Christian
values of forgiveness, Mandela was the product of Xhosa traditional
upbringing and Methodist schooling.
In his autobiography ‘Long Walk to
Freedom,’ Mandela spoke approvingly of the Xhosa rituals which his
mother, a convert to the Methodist faith, resisted but his father
followed, presiding over slaughter rituals and other traditional rites.
Coffin arrives Qunu for burial
Nelson Mandela’s coffin on Saturday
arrived his ancestral home Qunu in the Eastern Cape region of South
Africa, the final leg of its journey.
Large numbers of people lined the roads in the rural region to pay their respects as the cortege passed by.
A state funeral will be held on Sunday (today) for Mandela, who died on December 5.
At least 100,000 people saw the former
South African president’s body lying in state in Pretoria over the last
three days, but some had to be turned away.
According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, the coffin was flown from Waterkloof airbase in Pretoria on a C130 military aircraft, escorted by two fighter jets.
In line with tribal custom, Nelson
Mandela’s grandson Mandla accompanied him on the journey, speaking to
his coffin to tell him he was on his way home to rest.
It arrived in Mthatha, 700 km (450 miles) away at 13:37 local (11:37 GMT).
To solemn music, the coffin draped in a
South African flag was moved by a military guard of honour and placed in
a hearse to begin the 32km journey to Qunu, where Mr Mandela had said
he wanted to be buried.
People waving flags and cheering and
singing – in places 10 to 12 deep – lined the route taken by the cortege
through Mthatha town to pay their last respects.
Tears as well as smiles could be seen on the faces of onlookers.
“He is finally coming home to rest, I can’t even begin to describe the feeling I have inside,” 31-year-old Bongani Zibi told Agence France Presse.
“Part of me is sad but I’m also happy that he has found peace.”
However, some people expressed their
frustration that the convoy did not stop, so they had no chance to view
the coffin as people in Pretoria had.
The cortege then drove through the gates
of the Mandela homestead in Qunu, where it will rest overnight in the
grounds of the royal house of Thembu.
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