In keeping with Xhosa tradition, Mandela was laid to rest on a family
plot in the afternoon, when the sun is at its highest.PHOTO|AFP
In Summary
A few hundred people watched a live broadcast on a
big screen, framed by sweeping views overlooking Mandela’s home in Qunu
village.
Qunu. Perched above the pomp and ceremony of
Nelson Mandela’s state funeral, villagers and visitors to his rural home
said a final goodbye among the open spaces and grasslands of his
boyhood.
A few hundred people watched a live broadcast on a
big screen, framed by sweeping views overlooking Mandela’s home in Qunu
village.
“I felt that I was a part of it,” said local
Samora Makasi, 35, sitting in an open-walled tent as presidents, foreign
dignitaries and celebrities gathered below. “I could have watched it at
home but I wanted to be around people,” Makasi said.
Qunu has, in the 10 days since his death was
announced on December 5, been a hive of round-the-clock activity as
funeral organisers rushed to construct a venue for the 4,500 people who
wanted to attend the event.
The usual rural tranquility was interrupted by the
constant thumping whir of military helicopters and convoys bringing in
troops as the village was placed under a security clampdown. “I’m sad.
It’s unbelievable that Mr Mandela today is no longer with us,” said Qunu
resident, photographer Monde Sikweza, 48, as the sound of a 21-gun
salute echoed over the village.
“This long walk to freedom is gone now,” he said, holding a framed photograph of Mandela and fellow comrades in 1991.
Traditionally, funerals are open to anybody, but
the South African government had limited the number of guests, citing
security concerns and space constraints.
“I am happy watching this on television. My eyes are bad. I can see it better this way,” said villager Dickson Gangatele, 73.
Many watching in the viewing area had come from out of town.
“Ever since he passed away, I wanted to walk the
journey with him,” said Pascal Moloi, 52, who came from Johannesburg to
watch with Mandela’s fellow villagers. (AFP)\
Watching in the village, with a wide view of the
valley below, made him “feel much more connected” to Mandela, he said,
saying afterwards he thought the ceremony, which was over two hours
long, was “brilliant”.
But local Nonkuleleko Mfoboza, 45, felt differently.
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