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  • As we took Mandela to the beach that evening it was dark, with a little bit of light from

  • the streets here. The water was more high tide. First he didn't believe we owned the

  • beach, he heard the sound but he wanted to feel the water you know. And he tasted it,

  • take this the water, and just taste it to feel if it was really salt on the beach. And

  • we showed him the direction to Robben Island. We said "that is Robben Island". He first

  • think it was a big ship because it had its lights on and there were a few lights on on

  • that evening because at security points they had lights on. Otherwise it was dark.

  • 1970s South Africa: amidst the turmoil of the apartheid regime, an unlikely friendship

  • was blossoming.

  • The first time when we drove Mandela in a car, it was in 1980/81. It was a Ford Cortina.

  • There was quite a lot of time we were taking him. I would say at least every second month.

  • I think Mandela enjoyed it in a way. But he was not secure when he was sitting maybe alone

  • for a few minutes because he was become nervous "Where is his warden, we must look after him"

  • because we didn't know what to expect, other people may attack him-he was afraid.

  • The lives of Nelson Mandela -- South Africa's most notorious political prisoner - and Christo

  • Brandt- his guard - were intertwined for more than 10 years. It became a long-lasting friendship:

  • a relationship that broke all the rules of the apartheid regime. The men's backgrounds

  • couldn't be any more different. Mandela - a lawyer with royal blood, and Brandt - a white

  • working class farmer's son.

  • I was eighteen years old when I started work on Robben Island, I never heard about the

  • name Nelson Mandela at all.

  • 1978 was a harsh winter in Cape Town.

  • The first time I was on a boat-a big boat- was to Robben Island

  • Brandt had no idea what he was getting himself into.

  • I always heard about it, because there are big bad criminals on Robben Island, murderers.

  • So I when I got out there I was also a little bit nervous, when I got to Robben Island.

  • Brandt was immediately put to work in the so-called B-section: the wing reserved for

  • the prison's most dangerous inmates. By this point, Mandela had been locked up for 15 years.

  • Young Brandt went about his work with no idea of who the prisoners were.

  • The prisonors greet friendly, in some of the prison still standing up, made their beds,

  • ready for inspection. And they all greet friendly here. And I see old people. So I came back

  • to the sergeant, and they count the prisoners, and they open up to empty out the toilet pots

  • and clean up, and then later that day I said to the sergeant, 'what are these criminal

  • in for?' Because life, Nelson Mandela, life, only life. And he said 'that's the people

  • who tried to overthrow the country, those are the terrorists of the country.' And then

  • immediately I feel hatred towards these guys, because my friend died in the army and training

  • in 1977, we attended his funeral 3 months later after he was in training, killed on

  • the border. So I hated those people immediately, because they're the ones who killed my friend.

  • Mandela was condemned to life imprisonment and exiled to the island in 1964. This was

  • the last image the world got to see of him before his incarceration. When Christo Brandt

  • began his work as a prison guard, the outside world didn't know what Mandela looked like

  • anymore.

  • His name was well-known, but his face was not familiar to the people.

  • In fact, the regime was so sure he wouldn't be recognised that it allowed Mandela and

  • Brandt to visit a hospital in the heart of the city. From 1981, South Africa's public

  • enemy number one walked regularly through the city of Cape Town.

  • When we walked he would ask us questions about the new cars on the road, he was amazed. He

  • would always look at the cars and things and he said the people are busy, it's a very busy

  • street. He was afraid to walk over the street, 'is it ok', 'it's clear now' and we walked

  • straight over the street. But he didn't want to walk without us over the street, he was

  • afraid to just approach the street, we must lead him by the arm, I was like 'Come, Mandela'.

  • Back on the island, Mandela was subjected to a continued regime of humiliation and oppression.

  • But he did not react with anger. In his autobiography he wrote:

  • "The most important person in any prisoner's life is not the minister of justice, not the

  • commissioner of prisons, not even the head of the prison, but the warden in one's section."

  • "In general we treated the wardens as they treated us. Yet, being friendly with wardens

  • was not an easy proposition, for they generally found the idea of being courteous to a black

  • man abhorrent."

  • And Mandela said one day himself, he said when he asked officers he put in writing that

  • he wanted extra blankets at that time to sleep on the floor, the officer said 'Prisoners

  • are only allowed three blankets, extra blanket has not been approved.' And he sometimes asked

  • a normal warder who he was friendly with, who he had become friends with, asked her

  • 'hey warder, it's very cold tonight, is there not an extra blanket?' And they said 'No,

  • sure' and goes get him one, 'just put it out tomorrow morning'. Tomorrow morning he first

  • puts the blanket out, and he says sometimes he gets more right with normal warders on

  • a lower rank than he gets with an officer. Because they understand, because they're up

  • close, we'd become very close.

  • In early 1980s, Mandela's health deteriorated. He developed problems with his lungs and prostate.

  • The regime in Pretoria began to worry that his death in prison might lead to a national

  • uprising. Christo Brandt continued to accompany Mandela to the hospital. They often came to

  • this hospital, just outside the Cape Town city centre.

  • It was those three windows, was the cells where they kept him. When they do hospital

  • visits, when they go for hospital operations, anything, they host in those rooms. That is

  • why the bars are on.

  • The surgeons were not deemed trustworthy; Brand was therefore present in the operating

  • room during Mandela's surgeries.

  • The thing was they were afraid that Mandela was not secure, that they could wake him up

  • in theatre, that the doctors could ask him questions and things, he can talk in theatre,

  • they don't want him to say anything to the doctors. He can greet them, but they dont

  • want him to communicate with the doctors, because the government didn't trust all the

  • doctors who worked on him.

  • Brandt was also under strict observation. His boss regularly turned up at the hospital.

  • It happened also in this hospital, there was a guy James Gregory, he was my superior, and

  • when Mandela went for operations he must be reported to Pretoria when Mandela's awake,

  • he talk to us, he'd communicate, he's fine. And that day he wanted to go, he was in a

  • hurry, and Mandela was being operated on, and Mandela didn't want to come around. He

  • still sleeping. And he said to him 'Kaffa we're going to kill you, the Whites are on

  • you', and he sweared him off. And Mandela grumbled and tried to think, and when he recovered

  • later, Gregory was not there. Then he asked me later, 'hey, I had a funny dream', and

  • I said 'What funny dream?', and he said he heard this voice, people calling him 'kaffa'

  • all day. And I said 'oh I didn't hear anything', because I couldn't tell him Gregory had done

  • that.

  • From 1984 onwards, the apartheid regime began to carefully reach out the ANC leaders. Speaking

  • directly with terrorists was out of the question. But President Botha wanted to know what Mandela

  • would do if granted a parole. The Secret Service contacted Christo Brandt; his relationship

  • with Mandela appeared useful. Brand was asked to approach Mandela with a few specific questions.

  • I walked in and I was bugged, and I showed him that I was bugged. That's the sign, before

  • I even asked him, I made a sign, and I showed him, and then I showed him again because he

  • didn't think. Then it clicked and he said me it's fine, I understand. And I asked him

  • certain questions, that same evening on television they repeated that type of things which I

  • asked and the response of Mandela, and their responses on Mandela's response. And I was

  • like, hey, that the question I asked Mandela, and he responded that, and PW Botha just talked

  • the opposite of what we asked him.

  • If Mandela were to say that he wanted constitutional rights ... 'He does not want it, he stated

  • it over and over again.'

  • Botha was a hardliner; if he had his way, Mandela would stay behind bars. But the increasing

  • violence across the country and economic sanctions from the international community forced the

  • regime to negotiate with the ANC. Meanwhile, the story of Nelson Mandela entered the spotlight

  • yet again. He could walk with his guards through Cape Town no more.

  • People wanted to know more about Mandela, they wanted Mandela to be released now, there

  • was more pressure on Mandela's release. And then we became more security-wise, taking

  • him in private cars, not in a government car, in government ambulance, in a buggy cart,

  • like a prisoner. He was in private clothing, also dressed not in prison uniform anymore.

  • We tried to make him feel he was part of the community, but not allowing people to recognise

  • him.

  • After almost 26 years in the Robben Island and Pollsmoore prisons, Christo Brandt escorted

  • his prisoner to his next home - the Victor Verster prison. Nelson Mandela serves the

  • last two years of his sentence in a villa formerly occupied by the prison director.

  • It was also very strange for him you know. When we walked one day in the kitchen, when

  • we walked him out there, he said 'why a TV in the kitchen?' And we said 'no, no it's

  • a microwave'. He didn't understand a microwave, we showed him how the thing worked, and how

  • to warm up your food. He started learning new equipment.

  • 11 February 1990, the day of Mandela's release, went down in history. Crowds surrounded the

  • prison gate to get the first glimpse of the new leader. Helicopters hovered above the

  • villa, with millions waiting in suspense in front of their TVs.

  • Obviously the day before that he went to greet him and see him off, and tell him he must

  • keep strong, that we must keep in touch, and then he left.

  • Christo Brandt was Mandela's guard for 12 years. In 1992, Mandela became his president.

  • After his release the two men lost contact. But in 1995, the former prisoner called his

  • guard to offer him a job in the presidential office.

  • Tonight I want to welcome somebody here who has become like a father to me during those

  • years, his name is Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela.

  • The two friends worked happily together for years.

As we took Mandela to the beach that evening it was dark, with a little bit of light from

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曼德拉與獄警不可能的友誼 (Mandela's unlikely friendship with his prison guard)

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    阿多賓 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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