I have truly been surprised over the last few days about how much all the reports on the Electric Jew and in the Jewish controlled newspapers have concentrated on the death of the former South African communist and terrorist leader, Nelson Mandela. It has been sickening to see all of the reports calling this person one of the "greatest men" in all history, without telling the truth about how this man sought a violent revolution to take over South Africa and cared little about how many people, either black or white, that died in the process... Few know that he was imprisoned for some 27 years not because of "Apartheid" but because of his criminal and terrorist acts against South Africa itself!
To understand some truths about the REAL Nelson Mandela, I want to turn to a new article that was just put out yesterday by my friend, Whitewraithe, who writes the blog: Pragmatic Witness, at www.whitewraithe.wordpress.com. The article is entitled: "Nelson Mandela: Communist, Terrorist, Rabble-Rouser!" and is a must read by everyone who wants to see the truth about the "Great" Nelson Mandela. I have it right here for everyone to see for themselves, and I do have my own thoughts and comments to follow:
WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGES OF BRUTAL MURDER CONTAINED IN THE ARTICLE. CONTINUE READING AT YOUR OWN RISK!
The Mandela Legend:

Nelson Mandela, founded MK, which was defined as a terrorist organisation by the US government and by Amnesty International.
Webster defines a legend as “a story generally of a marvellous
character, told respecting a saint”. It has an historical background,
but is often padded and tainted by fantasy. In Mandela’s case, when the
facts are viewed realistically and objectively, any sensible person
will no longer see a saint, but a fantasy blown up to something
supernatural. It will become clear that a false image of the so-called
beloved Madiba is being presented to the world. He is by no means the
peace-loving, gentle daddy he is made out to be, but nothing less than a
tyrant. He did not spend 27 years in jail for no reason, as
continuously maintained. One example of these untruthful presentations
appeared in the
London Independent, May 1993: “Nelson Mandela is a
noble man … imprisoned for 27 years for his dedication to the cause of
Black majority in South Africa”.
How much of such misrepresentation could be ascribed to naive
parrot-talk and how much to deliberate communist propaganda cannot
easily be determined.
The truth is that he was not imprisoned
on Robben Island without reason – not even because he was merely an
opponent of apartheid. He was there because he planned to
overthrow a government and in the process, cause the violent deaths of
thousands of innocent people (including blacks) – a crime which deserved
the death penalty, and he must consider himself fortunate that the
so-called apartheid-regime did not press for it. In his auto-biography
Long Walk to Freedom,
het admits inter alia that he gave the order to plant the Church Street
bomb during the 80′s, which killed 11 innocent people and injured many
more.
In spite of this he was built up to an icon and held up as “a man of
reconciliation”, as “essentially moderate, a man of special discernment,
a courageous freedom fighter”. His international praise singers went
as far as comparing him to Moses and George Washington. Topping them
all was the American negro, Jesse Jackson, who blasphemously lifted him
to the level of Jesus Christ. What is equally dumbfounding is that the
post-1966 SA government hardly ever tried to unmask the real Mandela or
his share in the Rivonia complot or his close bonds with the ANC/SACP,
or to enlighten the public as to the aims of this alliance.

This
enormous soviet flag was displayed at ANC mass rallies. Communist
leaders such as Joe Slovo were not only present as dignitaries, but
later occupied key posts within the ANC government.
Pre-History of Mandela:
Rolihlahla Dalibungu (“Nelson” was added later) Mandela was born on
18 July 1918 at Mvezo (according to the biography published by the
Nelson Mandela Foundation) or at Qunu (according to
Aida Parker),
near Umtata in the Transkei, as a member of the royal Thembu family.
His education started in the local mission school, from where he was
sent to the Clarkebury Boarding Institute for his Junior Certificate.
Then to the Healdtown Wesleyan High School where he matriculated.
According to the biography of the Mandela Foundation (hereinafter
referred to as the
Biography) he then entered the Fort Hare
University as a BA-student, but was expelled for taking part in a
protest boycott. In 1941 he moved to Johannesburg, as he says, to
escape from an arranged marriage. There Walter Sisulu took him under
his wing, housed him in his mother’s house, supported him financially
and encouraged him to join the ANC, which he did in 1943. According to
the
Biography Sisulu arranged for him to do his clerkship at the
law firm of Lazar Sidelsky.
He completed his BA degree at Unisa in
1942 and shortly afterwards enrolled at the University of the
Witwatersrand for an LL.B degree which he had not passed by the time he
left in 1948. A few years later though he did pass the entrance
examination and started a legal practice in Johannesburg in August 1952.
In 1944 he became a founder member, probably with Sisulu and Oliver
Tambo, of the ANC Youth League, which soon developed into militant
organisation designed to canvas potential communists and apply pressure
on the ANC to opt for more violence. Five years later these three were
in total control of the Youth League and thus effectively also of the
ANC. Mandela was elected in 1949 to the National Executive Committee of
the ANC and became president of the Youth League the following year.
In 1952 he was nominated as voluntary head of the “Defiance Campaign”,
formed to incite opponents of the apartheid policy to civil
disobedience. These undermining activities regularly landed him into
trouble and he received several suspended sentences which restricted his
freedom of movement. Later, in 1952, he was elected Provincial
President of the ANC in Transvaal and Deputy President of the ANC.
Meanwhile, his patron, Sisulu, had become the first full time
Secretary-General of the ANC. After the events at Sharpeville on 21
March 1960, the organisation was banned and went underground. Since
then Mandela emerged as the leading proponent of the violence option to
overthrow the SA government. The current image of a “man of peace”
does not fit the man who in 1961, with Joe Slovo, founded
Umkhonto we Sizwe
(MK), the military wing of the ANC, as the main instrument to launch a
communist revolution in SA. In the same year Mandela became chief
commander and, according to Joe Slovo in his book
South Africa – No Middle Road,
shortly afterwards left for Africa and Europe to muster support for an
armed struggle and training facilities for ANC cadres. He also
personally underwent military training in Algeria in 1962. Towards the
end of that year, thanks to Mandela’s efforts, there were already
hundreds of ANC youths in revolutionary training in Cuba, Algeria,
Egypt, Ethiopia, North Korea, Russia, China, East Germany and
Czecho-Slovakia. In the same year Mandela was arrested for undermining
activities and jailed for five years. In the Rivonia trial (1963-1964)
he was found guilty and jailed for life.
Mandela was married three times and divorced twice. His first marriage was to Evelyn Mase (according to the
Biography) or Ntoko (according to
Aida Parker)
from which four children were born. From his second marriage with
Winnie Madikizela in June 1958 two daughters were born. On his 80
th birthday in 1998 he married Graca Machel, widow of Samora Machel of Mocambique.
Exalted to Symbol of the ANC Struggle

“Long live the Cuban Revolution. Long live comrade Fidel Castro” – Nelson Mandela
Reportedly it was decided in 1976 to “personalise” the so-called
struggle, which resulted in Mandela being glorified to a symbol of the
struggle as well as a martyr. Why him, is difficult to determine, as
both Walter Sisulu and Govan Mbeki, who were also serving sentences on
Robben Island, were his seniors in all respects. It would appear as if
Winnie Mandela’s image, which was also being polished at the time, had
something to do with it. With appellations like “Mother of the Nation” (
Mama Wetu),
“Warrior Queen”, “Black Evita” and ”The Madonna of the Left” the local
and international media boosted her reputation to almost that of a
goddess. In contrast, Albertina Sisulu, Walter’s wife and a cousin of
Mandela, was reportedly rather humdrum. Author is not aware that
Mbeki’s wife ever featured in the public eye.
It is equally not clear where this idea of image building
originated. Dr Igor Glagolev, who was for years instrumental in
obtaining Soviet support for South African terrorist movements but later
deviated to the West, states that the Russian (USSR) Politburo had
decided towards the end of 1950 to start a campaign to take over South
Africa. That in itself was not new, because the International Communist
Congress of 1928 had already instructed the Communist Party of South
Africa (SACP) to give special attention to the ANC and to convert the
organisation to a national revolutionary movement in order to overthrow
the White administration. Yusuf Dadoo, then chairman of the SACP, would
play an important role in these plans, as he had been in control of not
only the SACP but also of the ANC, since 1950. The USSR was of course
also behind the civil wars in Angola and Mocambique as well as terrorism
in the rest of Southern Africa.
Ironically it was the Western countries like England, America and the
Scandinavian countries that financed the terrorist movements in
Southern Africa in later years. They also actively participated with
the international Communist network in building the Mandela image,
referring to him as the man who would save South Africa – the black
Messiah to come. This active support of the ANC by the Western powers
was thus also the reason why, worldwide, there was hardly any criticism
against the ANC’s campaign of violence. How deeply the West was
involved is borne out by the fact that the ANC headquarters were not in a
Communist country, but in London.

This
child was a “necklace” murder victim. Take a car tire, some fuel,
binding wire to keep the victim cooperative – and a match. The ANC’s
sole contribution to modern warfare

With our boxes of matches and our necklaces we shall liberate this country” – Winnie Mandela.
Rivonia: a Diabolical Complot to Overthrow the SA Government
Even before the advent of the Republic the enemies of the Whites in
South Africa were intensively busy with undermining activities. In
1960, the ANC was banned and went underground. When it became known
that South Africa would become a republic, the ANC convened the All
African Conference where it was decided to insist on a national
convention, representative of all South Africans, before it became a
reality.
Should it be denied, a countrywide strike would be staged.
This did take place in May 1961 but was effectively squashed by the
government. The ANC then decided to continue its protest by means of
violence and for this reason MK (Spear of the Nation) was established.
On 16 December 1961 the ANC issued a manifest, displayed mostly on posts
in the black areas, in which it detailed its strategy for violence
against government institutions by means of sabotage. On the same day
the country was rocked by sabotage attacks, which escalated
progressively in the years to come. During 1963 pamphlets were even
distributed amongst Whites. Most of the early acts of sabotage were
planned and coordinated from Ronnie Kasrils’ flat in Johannesburg with
Nelson Mandela and Joe Slovo actively involved.
Initially the South African Police were unaware of the existence of
MK but in due course they determined that this organisation was
responsible for the sabotage attacks. Although they managed to arrest
many of the insurgents who had received military training outside South
Africa, often as soon as they re-entered the country, they were in the
dark as to who the leaders were. Meanwhile the ANC became more arrogant
and started with revolutionary broadcasts on
Radio Freedom from
mid-1963. The situation changed overnight when an informant supplied
theJohannesburg Security Police with details of the whereabouts of the
MK leaders. On 11 July 1963 in broad daylight, 15 policemen commanded
by a Lt van Wyk raided Liliesleaf, the 28ha farm of Arthur Goldreich in
Rivonia, 16km north of Johannesburg, and rounded up the surprised bunch
of communists consisting of eight Jews, four blacks and one Indian.
Since Mandela was already in jail, Goldreich had taken over as the main
conspirator. With him and his wife Hazel, the listed communist Lionel
Bernstein, adv Bob Hepple, Dennis Goldberg, attorney James Kantor and
his brother-in-law and partner Harold Wolpe, dr Fernstein, Govan Mbeki,
Walter Sisulu, Raymond Mhlaba and Ahmed Kathrada were arrested.
Goldreich, Wolpe and Hepple managed to skip the country. The SACP moved
its underground headquarters from Lilliesleaf to London.
Thanks to more information gained the police were able to swoop on
another farm, Travallyn, 14km from Lilliesleaf, a few weeks later. This
turned out to be not only a second hideaway but an arms factory as
well. A third hide-out was uncovered in Mountain View, Pretoria.
These raids rendered many incriminating documents, the most important being the one which described
Operation Mayibuye
(“come back”) in detail – the master plan for subverting the South
African government. The documents revealed ample evidence that Mandela
was the chief conspirator. Some of Mandela’s diaries were found,
containing evidence of his subversive activities, his involvement with
sabotage, his visits to and discussions with African leaders, his
participation in meetings of the Organisation of African Unity in Addis
Abeba and his speech imploring these states to become involved in his
struggle against White rule in South Africa. In addition a large
collection of equipment to be used in the launching of
Operation Mayibuye.
The accused first appeared in court on 9 October 1963 and again on 29
October and 25 November, but due to legal technicalities the case only
started in earnest on 3 December 1963. The accused were Mandela,
Sisulu, Goldberg, Mbeki, Bernstein, Hepple, Mhlaba, Kantor, Elias
Motsoaledi and Andrew Mlangeni. To save his own skin Hepple turned
state witness but escaped overseas before the session on 3 December,
after he and his family received all sorts of threats. Vernon Ezra,
Julius First (brother of Slovo’s first wife Ruth), Kasrils, Slovo,
Oliver Tambo (first president of the ANC) and Strachan also fled the
country before they could be accused.
The accused faced charges of sabotage, including deeds of sabotage,
committing of illegal deeds, canvassing persons for training in warfare,
manufacture and use of explosives with the aim to commit violence and
cause destruction (altogether 153 acts of violence were listed) and
conspiracy to engage in guerrilla-warfare with the aid of foreign
armies. Plans included the manufacture of 48,000 land mines and large
quantities of hand grenades, pipe, petrol and bottle bombs. These were
to be unscrupulously applied; camouflaged in the most innocent packages
like fruit boxes, coffee and jam tins and placed in soft spots like
footpaths and entrances to gardens, with the aim to achieve maximum
deaths, maiming and destruction.
Dr Percy Yutar appeared for the state, while Justice Quartus de Wet,
Justice President of Transvaal presided. The accused were represented
by advocates A (Braam) Fischer, VC Berrange, both listed communists, A
Chaskalson, G Bizos and JF Coaker (for Kantor). JJ Joffe was the
counselling attorney.
Although the state identified 270 witnesses, it
was only necessary to summon 173 of them, since the documentary evidence
was so damning and at no stage during the trial did the accused ever
challenge the authenticity of the documents seized, nor their
revolutionary aims. Amongst the documents were 10 papers in Mandela’s
own handwriting, explaining basic warfare, Chinese guerrilla warfare,
Israeli-Philippine underground military operations and how the
Witwatersrand locations were to be divided into four groups. Further
divisions into zones were to facilitate the formation of underground
cells.
An alarming scheme unfolded itself during the hearing.
Operation Mayibuye
was without doubt a master plan for full scale war and it was clear
that the designers were experts in revolutionary warfare. Most
probably it originated in some communist country like Russia, Red China,
Cuba or Algeria, which already had a history of revolution. Both
Mandela and Goldreich were regular visitors to these countries, where
many ANC conscripts were trained in the manufacture and application of
destructive instruments. For example, Goldreich, the author of
Operation Mayibuye,
was trained in explosive techniques in Russia, China and Germany, and
several other of his accomplices received training in the use of various
weapons, map and compass reading, radio communication, signalling and
the setting of ambushes.
In the detailed strategy all relevant matters such as logistic
planning and transport were fully dealt with. The attacks would take
place mainly in the platteland and to this end the country was divided
into four regions.
Each region would be invaded by a guerrilla force
which had to be self supportive for about a month. On arrival they were
to split up into three smaller groups of 10 men each and then, by
deception and intimidation, influence the locals to join them. It also
came to light that the ANC grossly deceived their ordinary members as
later directives were issued directly from the SACP. Mandela also
stated in one of his papers that South Africa under communist rule would
be a land of milk and honey.
While the local cadres carried on with their undermining activities
an external force of 7000 strong would be equipped and on standby to
invade the country. An interim government was to be appointed, which
could rely on the support of international labour unions to isolate the
Republic. The supreme command of
Operation Mayibuye (Mandela,
Slovo and Joe Modise) were convinced that if the plan could be finalised
successfully within six months, a wave of murder and grand scale
carnage would follow, which would eventually lead to the achievement of
their aim.
Organisations which cooperated in the planning of this diabolical scheme formed part of the
Congress Alliance and included the ANC, SACP, SA Congress of Trade Unions, the Coloured People’s Congress and the Congress of Democrats.
Most witnesses refused to testify under oath, thus avoiding cross
examination. Mandela, as accused number one, had a typed speech of 60
pages, which was distributed beforehand through leftist channels in
order to rouse sympathy for the accused, and which he dramatically
recited at conclusion of the court proceedings.
During an interview in 1990 it was revealed that the “
I am prepared to die”
speech was not written by himself, but that all the accused and most
probably their legal representatives had a hand in it, and that Anthony
Sampson, former editor of
Drum magazine and good friend of
archbishop Trevor Huddleston, at the request of Braam Fischer, was
responsible for the final editing.
On 4 March 1964 the state closed its case and the court went into
recession for a month to give the defence time to prepare their case.
On 11 June 1964, exactly 11 months after the raid on
Lilliesleaf,
justice De Wet delivered his verdict in three minutes flat. The final
version given later comprised 72 pages. Only Bernstein was found not
guilty but he was arrested again as he left the court, on charges under
the
Suppression of Communism Act. Even the editor of the
Rand Daily Mail,
fierce opponent of apartheid, had to agree that “the sentences
pronounced by Mr Justice de Wet yesterday at the conclusion of the
Rivonia trial were both wise and just”.
This did not conclude the police investigation. Within a month after
the case they closed in on more than 100 homes and arrested another 40
persons, 30 of them Whites.
Although this was a classic case of high treason and punishable under
the law of the day by death, the whole world was surprised when Dr
Yutar announced at the start of the trial that the state had decided to
lay charges of sabotage only. To this day it is not known why – no one
has ever offered an explanation for this decision. Justice De Wet also
stated that although the accused were guilty of high treason he could
only pass sentence on the charge of conspiracy, the maximum for which
was life imprisonment.
The verdict set in motion a world-wide vitriolic reaction and even
the UN insisted that the accused should be indemnified because they were
only opposing apartheid, yet Amnesty International declared that
Mandela could not claim to be a political prisoner, since he was guilty
of sabotage and violence. The South African government did not yield to
any pressure and dr HF Verwoerd severely criticised the world for their
double standards, using several examples to prove his stance. He made
this prophetic statement: “When they say they are glad Mandela was not
sentenced to death and he may still, like Kenyatta [the Mau-Mau leader
of Kenya] become the leader in the future – then I say: God forbid.”

Church
street bomb carnage – Nelson Mandela created the terrorist group called
“Mkhonto we sizwe” (MK for short). MK murdered far more black people
than white, and far more civilians than police or military, as in the
Church street bomb shown above.
Mandela and Communism
One of the documents, in his own handwriting, handed in as evidence in trial was titled
How to be a Good Communist,
in which he states categorically that the transition from capitalism to
socialism could not be brought about by the slow methods proposed by
the liberals, but only by revolution. He further maintains that
studying the Marxist philosophy is necessary to get firmer control over
revolutionary mass action (struggle) and continues: “The Communist
movement still faces powerful enemies which must be completely crushed
and wiped from the face of the earth before a Communist world can be
realised.” This view was later endorsed by every local communist.
However, not all ANC’s were impressed with Mandela’s communist
sympathies. The Anti-Marxists amongst them were “infuriated at the
manner in which Mandela and other ANC leaders have allowed the former
Black nationalist movement to be hijacked by the SACP”. How right they
were was confirmed in an article by Angela Davis, Communist party leader
in the USA, published December 1991 in the official organ of the
American Communist Party. She quotes Brian Dunning, a veteran member of
the SACP, who reveals that every member of the SACP is also a member of
the ANC.
Equally the ambitious young ANC leader and Secretary General of the
National Union of Mineworkers,
Cyril Ramaphosa, was at loggerheads with Walter Sisulu, in this case,
over the future leadership of the ANC. At the Lusaka council held in
January 1990 he openly declared that many others continued the struggle
while Mandela was imprisoned and “Mr Mandela should not expect to vault
over the heads of those who have carried on the struggle”. This
explains why Ramaphosa was side-tracked by both Mandela and Mbeki, and
thus never considered for the ANC presidency.
Mandela never made any secret of the close ties between the ANC and
the SACP. In his first speech after his release in 1990 he referred to
his friend and brother-in-arms, Joe Slovo, as “one of our finest
patriots”. Apart from his co-conspirators at Rivonia and co-prisoners
on Robben Island his preference for communists clearly showed in his
cabinet and other appointments after 10 May 1994. Steve Tshwete, Joel
Netshitendze, Sidney Mufamadi, Valli Moosa, Trevor Manuel, Alfred Nzo,
Cheril Carolus, John Nkadimeng and Tito Mboweni were all communists,
according to
Aida Parker Newsletter. Chris Hani declared that
Mandela never took decisions on his own but always first consulted with
his confidants, thus making sure that he had the support of most of his
comrades. Hani puts it this way in the
International Express,
4-10 February 1993: “However much the West may admire and fete him as a
brave individual, Mandela has debts to pay and forces to placate”.
Mandela has never Denounced Violence
Mandela pretends to be a proponent of peace who bears no thoughts of
vengeance towards his opponents, but the realities belies this image.
Apart from the communists and Afrikaner-haters which, thanks to his
efforts, have been placed in prominent positions, his promotion of Peter
Mokaba (of
Kill the Farmer, Kill te Boer fame) to deputy
minister speaks unquestionably of his hatred for the Afrikaner.
Equally, the appointment of the so-called Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, loaded with opponents of the previous government, reflects
his attitude towards the Afrikaner people. No truth and no
reconciliation ensued from this circus chaired by Desmond Tutu and its
sole purpose was to humiliate the Afrikaner.
It is clear that his “peace” comes from the barrel of an AK47.
Aida Parker
says that “compassion or feeling for the human condition have seldom if
ever played any role in his actions”. As early as 1961 Mandela
declared: “I and some colleagues came to the conclusion that as violence
in this country was inevitable, it would be wrong and unrealistic for
African leaders to continue preaching peace and non-violence at a time
when the government met our peaceful demands with force.” This
statement about government action is also not true. Should terrorists,
saboteurs and subverters be treated with kid gloves? The government
acted in accordance with the barbarous realities it was confronted
with. Any other government would have done the same.
Many similar statements by Mandela brought millions of young blacks
under the impression that the ANC/SACP ideal would be achieved by
violence only. In order to mobilise them Mandela himself told them that
if they wanted weapons, they must join MK. This recommendation of
violence was a free pass to anarchy, and Mandela should take full blame
for the violence which erupted over South Africa, and persists to this
day. The extent of the carnage is illustrated by these statistics for
the five years September 1984 to August 1989: 1770 schools, 7187 homes
of black owners suspected to be non-members of the ANC, 10,318 buses,
152 trains, 12,188 private vehicles,1256 shops and factories, 60 post
offices, 47 churches and 30 clinics were destroyed. During the same
period, 300 blacks were murdered, mostly by the barbarous “necklace”
method. The killing and mayhem has never stopped and latest statistics
show that 56 persons per day are being murdered in South Africa, not to
mention the rapes, armed and transito robberies, hijackings and house
breaking. Two million crimes are being committed annually of which less
than half are ever solved, because the police are incompetent and
themselves corrupt.
That crime is rife was acknowledged as early as 2001 by the then
Commissioner of Police, Jackie Selebi. A newspaper reported at the time
that he admitted that 600 crime syndicates are active in South Africa.
Since then regular reports informed us that the Russian and Sicilian
Mafia, as well as drug lords from Nigeria and elsewhere are thriving in
South Africa, and that this country has indeed become the crime Mecca of
the world. That is the wonderful heritage of Mandela and the ANC/SACP.
Meanwhile the poor, black and white, are poorer than ever before while a few elitist blacks are getting stinking rich.
After it became known that Mandela was to receive the Nobel prize for
peace, the ANC published a statement to the effect that Mandela has
always liberally supported the armed wing of the ANC financially, it is
likely that he would donate a sizable portion of his R3,1 million to
MK. That is the man who, according to the international media, is an
ardent promoter of peace!

This
child was an ANC landmine victim. Smuggling in thousands of landmines
was one of the charges which landed Mandela in prison.
The National Party (NP) and Mandela
On 2 February 1990 FW de Klerk delivered his now notorious Red Friday
speech in which he announced that Mandela would be released, despite
the continuing violence in the country. Interesting to note that while
so many tears are being shed about Mandela’s 27 wasted years in jail,
Aida Parker
reports that John Vorster suggested, as early as 1976, that he could be
released if he would settle in the Transkei with his brother-in-law
Kaiser Matanzima. Mandela refused the offer – he thought it would be an
acceptance of the NP’s homeland policy.
Aida Parker also
reveals that, shortly after that the Marxist MPLA offered to exchange a
Major of the South African Forces, who had been captured in Cabinda, for
Mandela’s release. Mandela also refused that.
In March 1982 he was transferred to Pollsmoor prison in Cape Town.
In 1984 there were serious discussions within the NP to release him, but
the revolutionary climate that had moved in over South Africa did not
allow it. It appears that Mandela knew all about these discussions and
that encouraged him to take the initiative to write a letter to Kobie
Coetzee, Minister of Justice. Thereafter he was transferred to a single
cell and discussions between him and Coetzee started in 1986. It is
reported that the government went as far as to secretly move him to the
luxurious three bedroomed house, until then occupied by the Chief of
Pollsmoor prison, and provide him with all the necessary facilities to
communicate with the ANC’s in exile. Even a chef was appointed to cook
to his desire. During December 1988 he was transferred to the Victor
Verster prison, near the Paarl. Chris Hani, a hardened communist and
commander of MK who, like Mao Tse Tsung, believed that power comes from
the barrel of a gun, revealed during the years immediately prior to the
De Klerk capitulation that he had free access to Mandela and needed only
to pick up the phone to make an appointment when he felt like it.
PW Botha was also eager to free Mandela and invited him to Tuynhuis
for discussions on 5 July 1989. Botha was willing to release him the
moment he denounced violence. Although Mandela indicated that he would
like to contribute towards the creation of a climate of peace, it is
doubtful whether he is to be believed, as this would not have fitted his
revolutionary character and future plans. It would also have been a
repudiation of the ANC’s violence option which led to the founding of
MK. Mandela never denounced violence, yet De Klerk released him on 11
February 1990, and at the same time un-banned organisations like the ANC
and SACP.
During a visit to the USA, on invitation of the CP of that country,
Hani predicted that South Africa will get a communist government. It is
unthinkable that the SA government did not take notice. Yet it appears
that De Klerk was so eager to negotiate with this terrorist
organisation that he did not want the Whites informed about the true
nature of the ANC or similar statements by Hani and other radicals in
the ANC/SACP. Thus the NP did everything in its power to present a
moderate image of the ANC to the electorate. Even the Intelligence
Service received orders not to investigate or expose any ANC activities
which would impair this image. When the
Aida Parker Newsletter
wanted to publish the horrid details of the ANC’s hell camps, they tried
to prevent it, fortunately without success. Naturally the NP also
hushed the details of the revolutionary plans foreseen by
Operation Mayibuye that came to light in the Rivonia trial; the fewer people that knew about it, the better.
We are still enjoying the results of this surrender politics. Not
only has the country been destroyed and transformed from a first world
country to a third world dump, but the process is unabated. It
now appears as if the reigning anarchy caused by strikes and violent
protests against poor service levels (mostly by people who do not even
pay for those services!) is but a smoke screen, and in fact is
purposefully directing us towards the start of the second revolution, as
planned by the ANC/SACP. As Dr Verwoerd said: God forbid.
Even foreign observers have pointed out that the ANC regime is
corrupt and incompetent. Shortly after the ANC takeover, British
historian Paul Johnson expressed the view in
The Spectator of
February 1995: “South Africa is a country afflicted by crime and
corruption, with tumbling standards and a population doomed to a poverty
stricken and carnal existence”. Under a socialist-communist regime
Mandela’s promise of a land of milk and honey has come to nought!
How can such a terrorist be regarded as a hero?
Conclusion
Not only has the deterioration on all levels escalated since 1994,
but 30,000 Whites have been murdered, often in the most ghastly manner.
The policy of “affirmative action” is the most inhumane discrimination
against Whites. The fact that so many Afrikaners have lost their jobs,
and by law cannot find new employment, has caused untold misery, while
black millionaires increase annually. It is estimated that 10% of
Afrikaners have been reduced to beggary in squatter camps, with all the
social and other evils ensuing from that. All the result of the De
Klerk treason which put Mandela into power.
It is ironic that people should clamour to declare 18 July as
international Mandela-day, almost as ironic as awarding the Nobel Peace
prize to Mandela and De Klerk. Now one understands why God revealed in
the Bible that there will be difficult times ahead for the Christian,
times in which men would rather “not endure sound doctrine; but after
their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching
ears; and they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be
turned unto fable”, when wrong will be right and the lie will be the
truth.

Historian and former deputy leader of the HNP – Dr Pieter Möller – wrote this biography of Nelson Mandela.
Dr Pieter Möller (July 2009).
English translation by Hennie Kasselman
Source:
http://hnp.org.za/site/index.php?id=67
WW~Notes: Why is America celebrating
the life of a foreign communist and terrorist? The beautiful city of
Johannesburg has been reduced to ghetto like conditions and unchecked
violence. See the blog THE DEATH OF JOHANNESBURG for a look into this once gorgeous city as it is today.
NTS Notes: Again, I am truly shocked by all the accolades put forward by everyone about this person being a true "hero" and a "man of peace" when the evidence clearly shows that he was absolutely neither...
I had been watching closely since Nelson Mandela's release and his ANC takeover of South Africa back in the early 1990's and what I saw was indeed horrific... That nation may have had its troubles under "Apartheid" but since the turn to majority black rule, then entire nation has turned into a third world sewer where the blacks themselves are suffering worse now than under the time of white rule....
I took a look at that "Death Of Johannesburg" blog as Whitewraithe suggests above, and I do recommend that everyone take a close look for themselves at what South Africa looks like today... The information and pictures will indeed shock you!
I do agree with Whitewraithe's basic question: "WHY is America celebrating the life of a foreign Communist and Terrorist?"... I really need to ask the criminals that occupy Parliament Hill, and especially the shills in the Harper regime, right here in Canada much the same question!
More to come
NTS