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  • May 29

    Blood line: Nelson Mandela and his grandson, Mandla, who is at the centre of a row over family exhumations - The battle for Brand Mandela

    In a remote corner of the website run by those who look after Nelson
    Mandela’s affairs is a page that conveys perfectly the acute concern over
    the legacy of the ageing South African icon. The page is entitled
    "Fraudulent Activity".

    Beloved by so many, beatified by some, the reality is that there are those who
    seek to profit fraudulently from association with the man who transcended
    politics to become a global symbol of decency. And as his passing draws
    nearer - he turns 93 on Monday, obliged by frailty to withdraw largely from
    public life - the fear is that exploiters are circling like hyenas around an
    elderly lion.

    Mandela’s advisors have long sought to protect his name. Ten years ago his
    then lawyer, Ismail Ayob, forced the closure of a Cape Town fast food shop
    newly opened under the tacky name of "Nelson’s Chicken and Gravy Land", with
    a menu offering the Nelson Liberation family meal.

    That same lawyer, ironically enough, later resigned as a trustee of the Nelson
    Mandela Trust after being accused of personally profiting from the sale of
    memorabilia including artworks bearing Mr Mandela’s signature. Mr Ayob
    denied the allegations but the dispute with a once trusted member of Mr
    Mandela’s inner circle was bloody and bitter.

    Even those involved in uplifting parts of the Mandela narrative have not been
    spared. Mr Mandela famously invited former guards from his time as a
    political prisoner of the apartheid regime to attend his inauguration as
    president in 1994 when minority rule had finally been defeated. More than an
    act of forgiveness, it was a commitment to the new South Africa, one that is
    inclusive, seeing beyond ranking by colour.

    But when one of those guards, James Gregory, wrote a book about his
    experience, Goodbye Bafana: Nelson Mandela, My Prisoner, My Friend, later
    turned into a feature film starring Joseph Fiennes, he was accused of
    fabricating a close relationship with Mr Mandela for personal gain.

    Mr Gregory died of cancer in 2003 but recently the Nelson Mandela Foundation
    commissioned a South African author, Mike Nicol, to put "the record
    straight". The resulting document, "Nelson Mandela’s Warders", now sits on
    the foundation’s website, more prominently displayed than the "Fraudulent
    Activity" page but speaking, none the less, to the same desire to protect
    what might be called the Mandela brand.

    Mr Mandela’s unique status as a brand - a leader who morphed into a symbol
    warmly regarded around the world - is the fundamental reason for this acute
    sensitivity over his legacy.

    He is bigger than simply a politician representing his beloved African
    National Congress; than a patrician at the head of a large family (he has
    three surviving children, 17 grandchildren and nine great grandchildren);
    than the son of minor Xhosa chief with traditional linkages associated with
    one of the country’s pre-eminent tribal groups; than a former president of
    Africa’s most powerful country.

    Each of these can lay some sort of proprietary claim to Mr Mandela but the
    problem is that no single claim is pre-eminent, a recipe for disagreement
    and, potentially, disaster.

    This lack of clarity was behind the terrible muddle concerning Mr Mandela’s
    health scare earlier this year. For a figure as important as Mr Mandela -
    when he gets ill the South African stock market dips, the Rand wobbles - it
    is not enough to say nothing when he is taken to hospital.

    But that is what happened as the ANC, the family and the foundation were
    paralysed. Mr Mandela recovered from what was later diagnosed as a
    respiratory problem, but the row over who was responsible for the public
    relations disaster festers on, the foundation privately blaming the party
    and vice versa.

    The lack of clarity over who speaks for Mr Mandela sometimes errs from
    understandable privacy into aloofness if not secrecy. Years ago I spotted a
    tiny error in the Long Walk to Freedom, Mr Mandela’s ghost-written
    autobiography, when he claimed incorrectly to have been interviewed and
    photographed while a prisoner on Robben Island by journalists from The Daily
    Telegraph.

    No such encounter with representatives of this paper ever took place, but when
    I politely sought to point out the error to his spokesman I was ignored. The
    mistake continues in modern editions of the book.

    Efforts have been made to sort out potential communication problems.
    Mr Mandela’s family has sought to work out a common front after years of
    occasional tension, often between what is known as his "First Family", the
    descendants of Evelyn, the woman he divorced in 1958 to marry Winnie, mother
    of the "Second Family".

    Talks were brokered by 46-year-old Ndileka, Mr Mandela’s oldest grandchild,
    who proudly describes herself as the "first of the first of the first" - the
    first child of the first child of the first wife of Mr Mandela - and she
    pronounced herself happy with the progress.

    "My argument was that for all large, high-profile families, and I was meaning
    people like the Kennedys, the important thing is a united front,’’ she said.
    "There were disagreements in the past but after a concerted effort by
    everyone, now I can say we are something like 80 per cent in agreement,
    which I think is pretty good. And which family anywhere in the world can say
    that it has no disagreements?

    But the problem remains that a figure as important as Mr Mandela will be
    scrutinised closely in every aspect of his life, and sometimes saying
    nothing leaves a vacuum inviting speculation.

    Recently the bodies of the three children of Mr Mandela who have predeceased
    him - a daughter, Makaziwe, died as an infant in 1948, a son, Thembi, who
    died in a car accident in 1969, and Makgatho, who died of an Aids-related
    illness in 2005 - were all exhumed.

    They were moved from their graves in Qunu, the village in the Eastern Cape
    where Mr Mandela spent much of his childhood, to Mvezo, another Eastern Cape
    village where he was born in 1918 before moving to Qunu. Mr Mandela’s oldest
    male grandson, Mandla, 37, is the local chief in Mvezo and he is believed to
    have coordinated the exhumations.

    Ndileka told The Daily Telegraph that the family was informed of the
    exhumations and "a consensus was reached after a consultative family
    process". She declined to give the reason for the exhumations, while Mandla
    politely declined to comment at all.

    This lack of clarity as to the grounds for the exhumations has fuelled rumours
    that Mvezo has been chosen as the place where Mr Mandela himself will
    eventually be buried, not Qunu. It must be hoped nothing has been done that
    will eventually end up on the "Fraudulent Activity" page.

    'Chasing the Devil’ by Tim Butcher (Vintage) is available from Telegraph
    Books for f8.99 plus 99p postage and packing. Please ring 0844 871 1515 or
    go to books.telegraph.co.uk