Johannesburg
Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela, who was married to Nelson Mandela for 38 years, has
been left out of the late anti-apartheid icon’s will.
South Africa’s popular online newspaper, the Daily Maverick,
said Winnie, who was divorced from Mandela in 1996, did not get
anything from the will of South Africa’s first democratically elected
president.
“Although Winnie was regularly around
Mandela in the later years of his life, and had a prominent place at
family events, he did not leave her anything,” it said.
“This
is likely to infuriate Winnie, who resents not being acknowledged for
her role in supporting Mandela and keeping his legacy alive during his
imprisonment…and yet, in his final act from the grave, Mandela let
Winnie go.”
FAMILY NEEDS
In
his will, Mandela named his widow, Graça Machel, and his two daughters,
Makaziwe and Zenani, as the family’s representatives in making
important decisions on the family’s needs.
Winnie,
Mandela’s second wife, suggested in a recent statement that Makaziwe
should run family affairs in concert with her own two daughters, Zenani
and Zindzi, earning the wrath of the AbaThembu royal house to which
Mandela belonged.
Questions that linger in the minds of
many analysts following the release of the will are: Why did Mandela,
who earned worldwide respect as a man who harboured no resentment, not
forgive Winnie? Why did he exclude her from his will? What will be
Winnie’s reaction?
“If Madiba was able to forgive the
apartheid lords who jailed him for 27 years, why didn’t he do the same
to his second wife?” one analyst wondered.
LEFT ESTATE TO STAFF
On
Monday, South Africa’s Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke read out
to the media excerpts from Mandela’s will, which spelt out the
devolution of his estate to his family, staff and education
institutions. (READ: Mandela estate worth estimated $4.1M)
Mandela
executed the will on October 12, 2004, a few months after announcing
his retirement from public life at the age of 85. Three months earlier,
he had flown to Bangkok to speak at the 15th International Aids
Conference.
He was therefore able to declare in the
document that he was “in health of body and of sound and disposing mind,
memory and understanding, and capable of doing any act that requires
thought, judgment and reflection”.
Anyone wanting to
contest the will has to challenge that particular declaration and argue
that Mandela was not of sound mind when he drew up the will. But an
appraisal of the executive summary released by the executors reveals
that Mandela thought hard about what he wanted to leave to whom from his
estimated 46 million rand (KSh357 million) estate.
According to the Daily Maverick,
there are also insights into his line of thought in terms of how the
estate is disbursed. Mandela’s love and respect for Graca Machel, who
kept vigil by his bedside as his health deteriorated, is evident in the
will.
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