Winnie was the embodiment of the struggle for which Nelson suffered
Dear Editor,
As South Africa marks the passing of Winnie Mandela with a State funeral, I, the Commonwealth, and the Caribbean must let South Africans know that we are there in spirit.
In the days before Nelson Mandela was released, Winnie was his symbol to whom we all related, and she was the embodiment of the struggle for which he suffered.
When the Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group sent Dame Nita Barrow (the former governor general of Barbados) into Soweto with Winnie in 1986 unknown to P W Botha, the Apartheid president of South Africa — it was a Commonwealth and Caribbean expression of alliance with the struggle.
When my official home, as Commonwealth Secretary General, in London was the first Winnie visited with Nelson on his release — to meet his anti-apartheid friends — it was a statement from her of love and gratitude to us all — as she wrote in our visitors’ book.
On the occasion of her State funeral we must be there with her in spirit and in remembrance of our privilege to have been by her side when it mattered most.
Sir Shridath Ramphal
Former Secretary General of the Commonwealth (1975-1990)