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Crowds gather in Qunu as Mandela's body taken to ancestral home for funeral

Thousands of people lined the route along which Mandela's coffin was to travel to Qunu for his funeral on Sunday

By Aislinn Laing, and Cole Moreton in Mthatha, Eastern Cape and Peta Thornycroft in Johannesburg,1:08PM GMT 14 Dec 2013, Source

 

Thousands of people lined the route along which Mandela's coffin was to travel to Qunu for his funeral on Sunday

The convoy carrying the remains of Nelson Mandela

drives on the streets of Mthatha on its way to Qunu

 

Thousands of people gathered on Saturday to watch Nelson Mandela's coffin travel on his final journey to his home in rural Qunu.

 

Flag-waving crowds watched as the funeral cortege passed along the route after the body of the adored former South African president's coffin was flown in to the nearby town of Mthatha.

 

Mandela will be buried at his family farm in Qunu on Sunday morning after a funeral due to be attended by 4,000 people including the Prince of Wales, Oprah Winfrey and Bill Clinton.

 

It was confirmed on Saturday however that Desmond Tutu, the former archbishop of Cape Town and close friend of Mandela, had canceled his flight to the Eastern Cape after failing to receive an invitation, or the requisite accreditation.

 

"Much as I would have loved to attend the service to say a final farewell to someone I loved and treasured, it would have been disrespectful to Tata to gatecrash what was billed as a private family funeral," he said in a statement.

 

"Had I or my office been informed that I would be welcome there is no way on earth I would have missed it."

 

Jacob Zuma's spokesman has insisted that Mr Tutu was on the guestlist for the event, saying he was a "very special person in our country".

 

However, there was speculation that the lack of invitation was a personal slight by the ANC which has been repeatedly stung by criticism levelled at its leaders by the influential and respected cleric.

 

Meanwhile, at the Shell Ultra City petrol station, the last stopping point on Mandela's final 45km journey from Mthatha airport to his home, there was a carnival atmosphere.

 

People wait for the convoy carrying the remains of

Nelson Mandela in Mthatha

 

Hundreds lined the road, waving flags and dressed in Mandela tshirts or school uniforms to reflect Mandela's insistence of education for all.

 

Meanwhile petrol station staff scuried around picking up litter from the verge, and police outsiders readied a phlanyx of 40 motorbikes with revving engines generating cheers from the crowd. Ice cream sellers did a roaring trade as people sought relief from the burning sun, while police officers optimistically rolled out yellow tape in a bid to keep the crowds from surging forward towards the cortÈge when it eventually arrived.

 

Noluvuyo Ngebelele, 56, a director at the local Walter Sisulu University, said she was "so happy" to see Mandela return home to the place he loved most of all.

 

"He has come home finally and will remain here with us forever now," she said. "He is a son of our soil. We are just so lucky to have lived in his era."

 

Vuyo Ngntyana, 29, proudly wore a green and yellow school uniform borrowed from a cousin.

 

"He taught us that education is the key to success," she said. "I think he is a legend. We're proud to call him ours."

 

Mandela's body was flown to Mthatha after an early-morning sending-off ceremony conducted by the ANC.

 

Mandla Mandela, Mandela's grandson and now traditional leader of the family clan, accepted the transfer of his remains from government to the family in a long farewell ceremony in a huge tent at the South African Defence Force's Waterkloof air base, outside Pretoria, early Saturday.

 

Mr Mandela, for the family, said: "For the past three days I have sat with my grandfather while he has been lying in state. I have witnessed his army, and his people, ordinary South Africans who walked this long walk to freedom with him. I can assure the president (Jacob Zuma) the future of this country looks bright."

 

In a tribute to his predecessor, President Jacob Zuma said: "Go well Tata, you have played your part, you have made your contribution, we will always remember you and keep you in our hearts and always learn from your lessons."

 

Meanwhile in nearby Qunu, there was a hive of activity on Saturday morning as family and government officials made ready the compound for funeral guests.

 

A large marquee had been erected close to the main house where the funeral was to be held at around 7am on Sunday. On the other side of a compound, overlooking the burial plot Mr Mandela chose for himself in a green space planted with tree aloes, stood a grandstand of seating.

 

Roads around Qunu were closed and motorists were directed by police to drive through the village of pastel-coloured, thatched houses instead.

 

In the gardens of some houses, people have erected their own, small tents and will be hosting events for families and friends with televisions set up to watch the funeral on national television.

 

Villagers also sold Mandela tshirts and snacks, and chatted to the deluge of foreign media about their memories of Mandela.

 

Sibusiso Masuna, 41, had come from Pinetown the night before with his wife Nomsa, 39. "I wanted to be here. I did not want to be told, I wanted to see this thing for myself. I was never able to bury my own father, I did not know him. Madiba was like the father to me, so I had to come here."

 

"He was a man of peace. I am what I because of him, without him there would have been no peace. But now you and I can live together, we are brothers. This is because of Tata Madiba."

Nelson Mandela laid to rest in boyhood village

By Sibongile Khumalo, AFP β€“ 1 hour 24 minutes ago, Source

 

Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first black president, was laid to rest Sunday after a state funeral filled with tearful eulogies and strident vows to pursue his ideals of equality and justice.

 

Mandela's casket was buried at a family plot in his rural boyhood home of Qunu, watched by his widow Graca Machel, ex-wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, other family members and around 450 selected guests.

 

The interment followed a ceremonial state funeral that ran well over its allotted two hours, as speaker after speaker paid emotional tribute to the man who led South Africa out of the apartheid era.

 

"The person who lies here is South Africa's greatest son," said ANC deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa.

 

A 21-gun salute and full military honour guard had escorted Mandela's coffin to the marquee where 4,500 mourners said their final goodbyes.

 

His flag-draped casket was placed on cowskins, surrounded by 95 candles -- one for each year of his extraordinary life.

 

The frail and ageing leaders of South Africa's anti-apartheid struggle also attended: George Bizos, Desmond Tutu and Ahmed Kathrada, whose voice broke as he delivered a eulogy for his old friend.

 

"I first met him 67 years ago," said Kathrada, who along with Mandela was sentenced to life in prison in 1963.

 

He recalled his fellow inmate as a powerful amateur boxer who could cope far better than others with the physical challenge of hard labour.

 

"What I saw in hospital was a man helpless and reduced to a shadow of himself," he said, struggling not to break down.

 

"Farewell my dear brother, my mentor, my leader."

 

"Now I've lost a brother, my life is in a void and I don't know who to turn to."

 

A towering public figure, Kathrada's words left many in tears among the invited guests, whose ranks included foreign dignitaries and celebrities ranging from Britain's Prince Charles to US talk show queen Oprah Winfrey.

 

The funeral closed the final chapter in the life of a towering public figure whose courage and moral fortitude turned him into a global symbol of freedom and hope.

 

During 10 days of mourning, hundreds of thousands of South Africans had turned out across the country to bid farewell to the founding father of their "Rainbow Nation".

 

They braved a rain-sodden memorial in Soweto and for three days queued to see his remains lying in state at Pretoria's Union Buildings.

 

For 50 million compatriots, Mandela was not just a president, but a moral guide who led them away from internecine racial conflict.

 

"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.

 

While Mandela had been critically ill for months, the announcement of his death on December 5 still sent a spasm through a country struggling to carry forward his vision of a harmonious multi-racial democracy of shared prosperity.

 

During the funeral, President Jacob Zuma told the country to carry on Mandel's legacy.

 

"One thing we can assure you of today, tata (father), as you take your final steps, is that South Africa will continue to rise.

 

"South Africa will continue to rise because we dare not fail you," Zuma said.

 

A private goodbye

 

After the ceremony, Mandela's coffin was transported to a graveyard sitting on the sprawling family estate that Mandela built in Qunu after his release from prison in 1990.

 

"It was in that village that I spent some of the happiest years of my boyhood and whence I trace my earliest memories," he wrote in his autobiography.

 

As the coffin was lowered into the ground, six jets flew over the gravesite in a "missing man formation", usually reserved for tributes to a fallen pilot.

 

After a life spent in the public spotlight, Mandela's final rites were a fiercely private affair.

 

A family deprived of their husband and father during his 27 years in apartheid prisons and many more years in public service seized it as an intimate last goodbye to a man who meant much to millions.

 

A live television broadcast followed the coffin to the graveside but was cut after several minutes in line with the family's wishes.

 

Overseen by male members of his clan in line with traditional Xhosa rites, the burial included the slaughter of an ox -- a ritual marking of a life's milestones.

 

Mandela was referred to throughout as Dalibhunga, the name given to him at the age of 16 after undergoing the initiation to adulthood.

 

After the ceremony Bizos -- who was Mandela's defence lawyer -- echoed the heartbreak of a nation.

 

"We have known each other for 65 years," Bizos said, "now he is gone."

 

"It has been a difficult 10 days."

FM
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