Africa Naughty Girl Displaying Her Big Breast In front of Cam
Friday, 6 December 2013
Africa Naughty Girl Displaying Her Big Breast In front of Cam
08:51
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Nelson Mandela dead: Obama pays homage to Madiba
08:23
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Nelson Mandela dead: Obama pays homage to Madiba
As South Africa comes to terms with the death of the father of their "Rainbow Nation", the world mourns along with them. US President Barack Obama has paid homage to one of his heroes at a special address at the White House. "For now let us pause and give thanks for the fact that Nelson Mandela lived. A man who took history in his hands and bent the arc of the moral universe toward justice," said Obama continuing, "his journey from a prisoner to a president embodied the promise that human beings and countries can change for the better. God bless his memory and keep him in peace." At the UN, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also paid his respects. "I'm profoundly saddened by the passing of Nelson Mandela. Nelson Mandela was a giant for justice and a down to earth human inspiration. Many around the world were greatly influenced by his selfless struggle for human dignity, equality and freedom. He touched our lives in deeply personal ways." (WARNING: GRAPHIC FOOTAGE) Courtesy: Dytynets TV When more than 100,000 pro-EU protesters took to the streets of Ukraine on December 1, the flashpoint came near the Presidential Administration Buildings in the city centre, where a throng of protesters who attempted to storm the building were driven back by riot police. A local station in Ukraine, Dytynets, released this video from that incident on December 4. It shows a man being hit repeatedly by passing riot police as he lies prone on the ground. An investigation into alleged cases of both police brutality and protester rioting is currently under way.
South Africa: crowds mourn Nelson Mandela's death and celebrate h
08:11
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South Africa: crowds mourn Nelson Mandela's death and celebrate homage
Nation mourns its 'father' Mandela
08:07
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Nation mourns its 'father' Mandela
Flags were lowered to half mast as people across South Africa commemorated Nelson Mandela with song, tears and prayers.
The government has prepared funeral ceremonies that will draw leaders and other dignitaries from around the globe.
A black vehicle containing Mr Mandela's coffin, draped in South Africa's flag, pulled away from his home after midnight, escorted by military motorcyclists, to take the body to a military morgue in Pretoria.
As the news of his death at 95 spread across the world, people in the black township of Soweto took to the streets near the house where he once lived, singing and dancing.
Amid the deep sadness at the loss of a man considered by many to be the father of the nation, mourners said it was also a time to celebrate the achievements of the anti-apartheid leader who emerged from prison to lead South Africa.
President Jacob Zuma, dressed in black, announced the news of Mr Mandela's death on television, saying the man known affectionately by his clan name Madiba had died "peacefully" at around 8.50pm surrounded by his family.
"He is now resting. He is now at peace," Mr Zuma said. "Our nation has lost its greatest son. Our people have lost a father."
Many South Africans heard the news of his death upon waking on Friday, and they flocked to his home in Johannesburg's leafy Houghton neighbourhood. One woman hugged her two sons over a floral tribute.
In a church service in Cape Town, retired archbishop Desmond Tutu said the anti-apartheid leader who became South Africa's first black president would want South Africans themselves to be his "memorial" by adhering to the values of unity and democracy that he embodied.
"All of us here in many ways amazed the world, a world that was expecting us to be devastated by a racial conflagration," he said, recalling how Mr Mandela helped unite South Africa as it dismantled apartheid and prepared for all-race elections in 1994.
In closing his prayer, he said: "God, thank you for the gift of Madiba."
Mr Mandela was a "very human person" with a sense of humour who took interest in people around him, said FW de Klerk, South Africa's last apartheid-era president. The two men negotiated the end of apartheid, finding common cause in often tense circumstances, and shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
In summarising Mr Mandela's legacy, Mr de Klerk said: "Never and never again should there be in South Africa the suppression of anyone by another."
South Africa's banking association said banks will close on the day of Mandela's funeral. The government has yet to announce a detailed schedule for a mourning period that is expected to last more than a week.
The liberation struggle icon's grandson, Mandla Mandela, said he was strengthened by the knowledge that his grandfather was finally resting.
"All that I can do is thank God that I had a grandfather who loved and guided all of us in the family," Mandla Mandela said in a statement. "The best lesson that he taught all of us was the need for us to be prepared to be of service to our people."
He said the late statesman was the embodiment of strength, struggle, and survival. As a grandfather Mr Mandela would always be remembered as kind-hearted, generous and wise.
Mandla Mandela expressed gratitude for the national and international support his family had received during Mr Mandela's long health problems.
"We in the family recognise that Madiba belongs not only to us but to the entire world. The messages we have received since last night have heartened and overwhelmed us."
Zelda la Grange, Mr Mandela's personal assistant for almost two decades, said the elder statesman inspired people to forgive, reconcile, care, be selfless, tolerant, and to maintain dignity no matter what the circumstances.
"His legacy will not only live on in everything that has been named after him, the books, the images, the movies. It will live on in how we feel when we hear his name, the respect and love, the unity he inspired in us as a country, but particularly how we relate to one another," she said in a statement.
Helen Zille, leader of the country's official opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, and premier of the Western Cape, the only province not controlled by the ANC, commented: "We all belong to the South African family - and we owe that sense of belonging to Madiba. That is his legacy. It is why there is an unparalleled outpouring of national grief at his passing. It is commensurate with the contribution he made to our country."
Later, Mr Zuma said Mr Mandela will be buried on Sunday, December 15.
The president also said that a memorial service in a Johannesburg stadium will be held for the anti-apartheid leader on Tuesday.
Mr Zuma said that Mr Mandela's body will lie in state at government buildings in Pretoria from Wednesday until the burial.
He said this coming Sunday will be a national day of prayer and reflection.
Nelson Mandela obituary: from political fugitive to prophet of freedom
07:46
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Nelson Mandela obituary: from political fugitive to prophet of freedom
"We want him to remain forever. But what more do we want from him?"
Archbishop Desmond Tutu spoke these words in January 2011, when Nelson Mandela was hospitalised with an acute respiratory infection.
At the time, the condition of the former president of South Africa, and first black man to lead his country, was unclear. Mandela had been treated for tuberculosis during the 1980s, and later had an operation to repair damage to his eyes. In 2001 he had received treatment for prostate cancer.
This particular health scare, however, seemed more serious. "Everyone was holding their hearts and saying not now," said a woman who lived across the street from Mandela in the suburb of Houghton in Johannesburg. "A person like Mr Mandela, we still need him."
On this occasion such fears over Mandela's wellbeing proved groundless. He was discharged from hospital within a few days and returned home.
But now Mandela really has gone. And those same people in his home country and across the globe are facing a future without a man whose life story will forever remain one of the most remarkable of the 20th century.
Early years
Nelson Mandela was born in 1918 into the Xhosa-speaking Thembu dynasty in the village of Mvezo, which lies in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa.
He was initially given the name Rolihlahla. "The only thing my father bestowed upon me at birth was a name," Mandela later wrote. "In Xhosa, Rolihlahla literally means 'pulling the branch of a tree', but its colloquial meaning more accurately would be 'troublemaker'."
His English name of Nelson came later, courtesy of a teacher at his school.
Mandela's father, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa, was a counsellor to the Thembu royal family and a respected member of village society. But he died of tuberculosis when his son was just nine years old, leading the young boy to be placed in the care of the acting regent of the Thembu people, chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo, whom his father had once advised.
Mandela's status as the ward of an heir to the throne would shape the early years of his life. He went to a mission school next to the royal palace, then a boarding institute, and finally a college in Fort Beaufort that counted much Thembu royalty among its former pupils. It was expected that Mandela would inherit his father's position as a privy councillor, and he began studying a Bachelor of Arts degree at Fort Hare University.
Youthful rebellion
It was at university that Mandela's career and also his behaviour began to deviate from that expected of him.
An interest in student politics led him to meet Oliver Tambo, who would become a lifelong friend and fellow activist. It also resulted in him joining a boycott against the university's discriminatory policies, which got him expelled at the end of his first year.
Next came news that Jongintaba, still formally Mandela's guardian, had arranged a marriage for him. Alarmed, Mandela moved to Johannesburg to effectively begin a new life. After a short period working as a guard at a mine, he took a junior role at the law firm Witkin, Sidelsky and Edelman. Mandela wasn't entirely beyond exploiting old ties: he got the job partly thanks to connections with his friend and mentor, the real estate salesman Walter Sisulu.
The next significant event in Mandela's life came in 1943, when he joined the African National Congress (ANC): the organisation set up in 1912 to promote and increase the rights of the black South African population.
By now he had began law studies at the University of Witwatersrand. The fight for racial equality was becoming a cause of increasing importance and urgency for Mandela, but there were personal developments in his life as well as political ones. The following year he married his first wife, Evelyn Mase. They were divorced in 1957 after having three children.
Joining the fight
In 1948 the Afrikaner-dominated National Party won the South African general election. It was a victory that meant racial segregation - known as apartheid - was now official government policy across the country. It also meant black people were not now allowed to vote, and would not regain this right until 1994.
The ANC's struggle became loud and aggressive, as did Mandela's participation. He set up and ran the ANC Youth League, played a key role in the Defiance Campaign of 1952 intended to encourage non-cooperation with certain laws, and supported the Freedom Charter of 1955: a statement of core principles of the ANC and other anti-apartheid groups.
Police broke up a special congress designed to adopt the charter, with Mandela only escaping by disguising himself as a milkman.
Under arrest
Mandela's involvement with the law took a less agreeable but hugely significant turn in 1956.
He was arrested in a raid on 5 December and, along with 155 others, charged with high treason. An incredibly lengthy trial followed, during which Mandela and many others were detained in communal cells in Johannesburg Prison, known as the Fort.
But the case increased the profile of many ANC members besides spreading awareness of its cause. "We are not anti-white, we are against white supremacy," Mandela told the court. "We have condemned racialism no matter by whom it is professed."
Ultimately the case fell apart and all the accused were found not guilty in 1961. Mandela was now a nationally-known figure, but also an outlaw.
To escape a repeat arrest he went on the run, together with his new wife Winnie Madikizela. He avoided detection for 17 months, until a tip-off from the CIA led to the security police capturing him on 5 August 1962. He was charged with sabotage and sentenced to five years in prison.
While in jail, more charges were brought against him, including one of treason. "I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities," he told the court. "It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die." In 1964 he was found guilty again and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Behind bars
"It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails," Mandela wrote later. "A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones."
He would go on to spend 18 years in a cell on Robben Island. He was allowed one letter and one visitor every six months. His only physical activity was splitting rocks in a lime quarry.
Throughout this period, while many ANC leaders were in jail or exile, the fight against apartheid continued, especially in many of South Africa's black townships that saw regular scenes of brutal and bloody oppression. From inside prison, Mandela could do little to influence events. But his name began to become known around the world, and in 1980 a campaign was launched by Oliver Tambo, then living in exile, to secure Mandela's release.
In 1982 Mandela was transferred to Pollsmoor Prison on the mainland. The South African government was conscious of his growing global reputation, and the move was intended to allow them to begin discreet contact with him and other ANC leaders. This resulted in the president, PW Botha, offering Mandela freedom in 1985 so long as he "unconditionally rejected violence as a political weapon".
Mandela refused, releasing a statement via his daughter Zindzi saying: "What freedom am I being offered while the organisation of the people remains banned? Only free men can negotiate. A prisoner cannot enter into contracts."
Nonetheless, contact was maintained and meetings began to take place between Mandela and members of the ruling National Party. The first was in Volks Hospital in Cape Town, where Mandela was recovering from prostate surgery.
Freedom
A combination of events led to Mandela's ultimate release. In 1988 he was moved to Victor Verster Prison where conditions were slightly more relaxed and he could receive regular visitors. Trade sanctions on South Africa imposed by various foreign countries were limiting economic growth. Then, in 1989, PW Botha suffered a stroke and was replaced as president by the less hardline FW De Klerk.
Within months De Klerk had lifted the ban on the ANC and other anti-apartheid organisations. On 2 February 1990 he announced that Nelson Mandela would be released from prison, an event that took place nine days later.
Mandela went on to become president of the ANC and led his party in the negotiations that culminated in South Africa's first multi-racial elections in 1994. For his work, and that of De Klerk, the pair were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
Those elections took place on 27 April 1994. The ANC won 62% of the vote, and Mandela duly became South Africa's first black president. He served for five years, charting a slow but steady course away from the apartheid-era of the past to a free, democratic future.
President Mandela
One of the key themes of Mandela's term in office was reconciliation. For example, he encouraged black South Africans to support to Springboks - the national rugby team - when the country hosted by the 1995 Rugby World Cup. A Truth and Reconciliation Committee was also set up to hear, record and in some instances grant amnesty for human rights crimes committed by all sides dating back decades.
Repairing the damage caused by apartheid proved a task too large for Mandela to accomplish during his time as president. But his government passed many of pieces of legislation that began to improve the lives of South Africans, both black and white, including free health care for all children under six, disability grants and old age pensions, compulsory schooling to the age of 16, 750,000 new houses, and extending electricity and water supplies to millions more citizens.
More immediately successful were Mandela's foreign trips, which he spent meeting leaders and promoting his country as a place for investment and tourism.
His personal life was just as eventful. Mandela divorced his second wife Winnie in 1992, after she was convicted on charges of kidnapping and accessory to assault. Six years later, on his 80th birthday, he married Graca Machel, the widow of the former president of Mozambique.
Retirement
Despite the enormous affection and respect in which he was held, Mandela decided not to stand for a second term as president and retired in 1999, to be succeeded by Thabo Mbeki.
He spent much of his final years concentrating on his family. He faced the tragedy of his son Makgatho dying of an Aids-related illness in 2005, but continued to make occasional appearances, most notably at the closing ceremony of the World Cup in 2010. Though physically frail, the former president still commanded dignity.
In 2007 he established The Elders: a group of former world leaders and veteran politicians, intended to help broker solutions for global crises. The organisation will be one of his key legacies - as will Mandela Day, 18 July, inaugurated by the United Nations General Assembly in 2009 to mark his contribution to world freedom.
Three fundraising charities associated with Mandela have also been established: the Nelson Mandela Foundation, the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund and the Mandela Rhodes Foundation.
When he fell ill in January 2011, Eva Ntuli, a churchgoer in Soweto, told the press: "We don't forget him. Even the smallest children cry: Dada, you must live for us. They pray everyday."
Without him, the life of Ms Ntuli, and the lives of millions if not billions, are all somehow diminished.
Mandela spoke on many things. Often his most inspirational statements were also the most obvious. Yet they always sounded eternally compelling, coming from a man who had lived, and suffered, to such an extent as he.
"No one is born hating another person because of the colour of his skin, or his background, or his religion," he wrote.
"People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite."
Archbishop Desmond Tutu spoke these words in January 2011, when Nelson Mandela was hospitalised with an acute respiratory infection.
At the time, the condition of the former president of South Africa, and first black man to lead his country, was unclear. Mandela had been treated for tuberculosis during the 1980s, and later had an operation to repair damage to his eyes. In 2001 he had received treatment for prostate cancer.
This particular health scare, however, seemed more serious. "Everyone was holding their hearts and saying not now," said a woman who lived across the street from Mandela in the suburb of Houghton in Johannesburg. "A person like Mr Mandela, we still need him."
On this occasion such fears over Mandela's wellbeing proved groundless. He was discharged from hospital within a few days and returned home.
But now Mandela really has gone. And those same people in his home country and across the globe are facing a future without a man whose life story will forever remain one of the most remarkable of the 20th century.
Early years
Nelson Mandela was born in 1918 into the Xhosa-speaking Thembu dynasty in the village of Mvezo, which lies in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa.
He was initially given the name Rolihlahla. "The only thing my father bestowed upon me at birth was a name," Mandela later wrote. "In Xhosa, Rolihlahla literally means 'pulling the branch of a tree', but its colloquial meaning more accurately would be 'troublemaker'."
His English name of Nelson came later, courtesy of a teacher at his school.
Mandela's father, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa, was a counsellor to the Thembu royal family and a respected member of village society. But he died of tuberculosis when his son was just nine years old, leading the young boy to be placed in the care of the acting regent of the Thembu people, chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo, whom his father had once advised.
Mandela's status as the ward of an heir to the throne would shape the early years of his life. He went to a mission school next to the royal palace, then a boarding institute, and finally a college in Fort Beaufort that counted much Thembu royalty among its former pupils. It was expected that Mandela would inherit his father's position as a privy councillor, and he began studying a Bachelor of Arts degree at Fort Hare University.
Youthful rebellion
It was at university that Mandela's career and also his behaviour began to deviate from that expected of him.
An interest in student politics led him to meet Oliver Tambo, who would become a lifelong friend and fellow activist. It also resulted in him joining a boycott against the university's discriminatory policies, which got him expelled at the end of his first year.
Next came news that Jongintaba, still formally Mandela's guardian, had arranged a marriage for him. Alarmed, Mandela moved to Johannesburg to effectively begin a new life. After a short period working as a guard at a mine, he took a junior role at the law firm Witkin, Sidelsky and Edelman. Mandela wasn't entirely beyond exploiting old ties: he got the job partly thanks to connections with his friend and mentor, the real estate salesman Walter Sisulu.
The next significant event in Mandela's life came in 1943, when he joined the African National Congress (ANC): the organisation set up in 1912 to promote and increase the rights of the black South African population.
By now he had began law studies at the University of Witwatersrand. The fight for racial equality was becoming a cause of increasing importance and urgency for Mandela, but there were personal developments in his life as well as political ones. The following year he married his first wife, Evelyn Mase. They were divorced in 1957 after having three children.
Joining the fight
In 1948 the Afrikaner-dominated National Party won the South African general election. It was a victory that meant racial segregation - known as apartheid - was now official government policy across the country. It also meant black people were not now allowed to vote, and would not regain this right until 1994.
The ANC's struggle became loud and aggressive, as did Mandela's participation. He set up and ran the ANC Youth League, played a key role in the Defiance Campaign of 1952 intended to encourage non-cooperation with certain laws, and supported the Freedom Charter of 1955: a statement of core principles of the ANC and other anti-apartheid groups.
Police broke up a special congress designed to adopt the charter, with Mandela only escaping by disguising himself as a milkman.
AP Photo, Jurgen Schadeberg
Throughout
this period Mandela maintained an important day job. He was now a
qualified lawyer and in 1952 opened a law practice in Johannesburg with
his partner and old friend, Oliver Tambo. The pair provided free or
low-cost advice to many blacks who lacked legal representation.Under arrest
Mandela's involvement with the law took a less agreeable but hugely significant turn in 1956.
He was arrested in a raid on 5 December and, along with 155 others, charged with high treason. An incredibly lengthy trial followed, during which Mandela and many others were detained in communal cells in Johannesburg Prison, known as the Fort.
But the case increased the profile of many ANC members besides spreading awareness of its cause. "We are not anti-white, we are against white supremacy," Mandela told the court. "We have condemned racialism no matter by whom it is professed."
Ultimately the case fell apart and all the accused were found not guilty in 1961. Mandela was now a nationally-known figure, but also an outlaw.
AP Photo
The
ANC had been banned in 1960. Mandela was its national vice-president,
but also leader of its military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe, or Spear of the
Nation. His support for armed struggle was, he argued, a last resort.
But it rendered him in many eyes as terrorist: a perception that existed
long into the 1980s within, among others, the UK and US governments.To escape a repeat arrest he went on the run, together with his new wife Winnie Madikizela. He avoided detection for 17 months, until a tip-off from the CIA led to the security police capturing him on 5 August 1962. He was charged with sabotage and sentenced to five years in prison.
While in jail, more charges were brought against him, including one of treason. "I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities," he told the court. "It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die." In 1964 he was found guilty again and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Behind bars
"It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails," Mandela wrote later. "A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones."
He would go on to spend 18 years in a cell on Robben Island. He was allowed one letter and one visitor every six months. His only physical activity was splitting rocks in a lime quarry.
Throughout this period, while many ANC leaders were in jail or exile, the fight against apartheid continued, especially in many of South Africa's black townships that saw regular scenes of brutal and bloody oppression. From inside prison, Mandela could do little to influence events. But his name began to become known around the world, and in 1980 a campaign was launched by Oliver Tambo, then living in exile, to secure Mandela's release.
In 1982 Mandela was transferred to Pollsmoor Prison on the mainland. The South African government was conscious of his growing global reputation, and the move was intended to allow them to begin discreet contact with him and other ANC leaders. This resulted in the president, PW Botha, offering Mandela freedom in 1985 so long as he "unconditionally rejected violence as a political weapon".
Mandela refused, releasing a statement via his daughter Zindzi saying: "What freedom am I being offered while the organisation of the people remains banned? Only free men can negotiate. A prisoner cannot enter into contracts."
Nonetheless, contact was maintained and meetings began to take place between Mandela and members of the ruling National Party. The first was in Volks Hospital in Cape Town, where Mandela was recovering from prostate surgery.
Freedom
A combination of events led to Mandela's ultimate release. In 1988 he was moved to Victor Verster Prison where conditions were slightly more relaxed and he could receive regular visitors. Trade sanctions on South Africa imposed by various foreign countries were limiting economic growth. Then, in 1989, PW Botha suffered a stroke and was replaced as president by the less hardline FW De Klerk.
Within months De Klerk had lifted the ban on the ANC and other anti-apartheid organisations. On 2 February 1990 he announced that Nelson Mandela would be released from prison, an event that took place nine days later.
AP Photo
Television
cameras beamed live pictures around the world of Mandela, grey, thin
but dignified, walking slowly to his freedom. It was a moment of
history. Mandela had been sent to jail branded a bandit and a thug. He
emerged a statesman.Mandela went on to become president of the ANC and led his party in the negotiations that culminated in South Africa's first multi-racial elections in 1994. For his work, and that of De Klerk, the pair were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
Those elections took place on 27 April 1994. The ANC won 62% of the vote, and Mandela duly became South Africa's first black president. He served for five years, charting a slow but steady course away from the apartheid-era of the past to a free, democratic future.
President Mandela
One of the key themes of Mandela's term in office was reconciliation. For example, he encouraged black South Africans to support to Springboks - the national rugby team - when the country hosted by the 1995 Rugby World Cup. A Truth and Reconciliation Committee was also set up to hear, record and in some instances grant amnesty for human rights crimes committed by all sides dating back decades.
Repairing the damage caused by apartheid proved a task too large for Mandela to accomplish during his time as president. But his government passed many of pieces of legislation that began to improve the lives of South Africans, both black and white, including free health care for all children under six, disability grants and old age pensions, compulsory schooling to the age of 16, 750,000 new houses, and extending electricity and water supplies to millions more citizens.
More immediately successful were Mandela's foreign trips, which he spent meeting leaders and promoting his country as a place for investment and tourism.
His personal life was just as eventful. Mandela divorced his second wife Winnie in 1992, after she was convicted on charges of kidnapping and accessory to assault. Six years later, on his 80th birthday, he married Graca Machel, the widow of the former president of Mozambique.
Retirement
Despite the enormous affection and respect in which he was held, Mandela decided not to stand for a second term as president and retired in 1999, to be succeeded by Thabo Mbeki.
AP Photo, Luca Bruno
Initially
he maintained his hectic schedule of world travel, attending
conferences, collecting awards and delivering speeches. But in June
2004, just ahead of his 86th birthday he announced he was retiring from
public life, informing the world: "Don't call me; I'll call you."He spent much of his final years concentrating on his family. He faced the tragedy of his son Makgatho dying of an Aids-related illness in 2005, but continued to make occasional appearances, most notably at the closing ceremony of the World Cup in 2010. Though physically frail, the former president still commanded dignity.
In 2007 he established The Elders: a group of former world leaders and veteran politicians, intended to help broker solutions for global crises. The organisation will be one of his key legacies - as will Mandela Day, 18 July, inaugurated by the United Nations General Assembly in 2009 to mark his contribution to world freedom.
Three fundraising charities associated with Mandela have also been established: the Nelson Mandela Foundation, the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund and the Mandela Rhodes Foundation.
When he fell ill in January 2011, Eva Ntuli, a churchgoer in Soweto, told the press: "We don't forget him. Even the smallest children cry: Dada, you must live for us. They pray everyday."
Without him, the life of Ms Ntuli, and the lives of millions if not billions, are all somehow diminished.
Mandela spoke on many things. Often his most inspirational statements were also the most obvious. Yet they always sounded eternally compelling, coming from a man who had lived, and suffered, to such an extent as he.
"No one is born hating another person because of the colour of his skin, or his background, or his religion," he wrote.
"People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite."