Boo who and boo why: What the barracking of Zuma portends for next year's elections
12 December 2013
South African President Jacob Zuma told foreign leaders and diplomats on Wednesday that former president Nelson Mandela had once said that the first thing he would do upon arrival in heaven would be to join the heavenly ANC branch. ‘And if he did not find one, he would quickly establish one,' Zuma said at a reception in Pretoria for those leaders who had stayed on in South Africa after Mandela's memorial service at the FNB stadium on Tuesday, to view his body lying in state at the Union Buildings.
International Relations and Cooperation Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane had just said much the same thing, joking that Mandela was even now forming a quorum to establish that ANC branch in the clouds. Zuma then gave the foreigners a long account of Mandela's history in the ANC to show how integral it was to his life and vice versa.
The day before at the FNB stadium, US President Barack Obama had captivated the crowd - and upstaged Zuma - with a rousing speech that dwelt on the lessons Mandela's life had to offer the rest of us, himself notably included. But a day later Zuma was saying, yes, Mandela had been a mentor to those who followed him; however, he had also been a protégé of those ANC leaders who had preceded him. In other words, Zuma seemed to be saying that the ANC was larger than Mandela. Maybe he was also saying, ‘Obama might be a fine orator, but he doesn't know Mandela like I know Mandela.'
He closed by telling the foreign leaders that by coming to South Africa they had given themselves the opportunity ‘to express condolences to the Mandela family but also his larger family, the ANC'. The leaders and diplomats seemed rather bemused at the history lesson and the notion that they had come to South Africa to convey condolences to the ANC. It seemed inappropriate for Zuma to be speaking to a foreign audience in effect as ANC president rather than as national president.