Tribute by the Deputy President  of the Republic of South Africa, Kgalema Motlanthe, at the Thanksgiving Service  to Celebrate the Life and Work of Former President Nelson Mandela, London,  United Kingdom, 03 March 2014 
        Nelson Mandela, a  visionary leader, represented the possibility of a better human society, not  only in South Africa but in the world at large.  His life gave bearing to  transcendent values. 
           
          Nelson Mandela never claimed glory even when he achieved great  things.  
          He was shaped by the struggle, which shunned confrontation but  held values of compassion and solidarity that went beyond simple opposition to  apartheid.  The struggle sought to advance social comfort and to embrace  the value of the natural environment.  
          Inheritors of his dream have the unenviable challenge to make the  dream for which Mandela lived come to pass.  
           
          We can no longer be  indifferent in a world where children’s stomachs are bloated with hunger when  there is more than enough to feed the world.  
          We can no longer pretend  that racial discrimination is a figment of the imagination, in a world where  heightened racial consciousness confines millions to the margins of global  society.  
           
          Humanity must consciously  strive to free political activity, democracy, and the right to differ without  the prospect of imprisonment, torture and assassination.   
          The most enduring monument  we can build to Mandela’s memory is to strive for human solidarity, to conquer  racism and sexism, to eradicate social inequalities, educate the masses, make  health accessible to all, and uphold a human rights culture.  
           
          Posterity will look at the  current generation in the light of the Mandela experience.  If we fail it  will not make sense to future generations that while Mandela evolved into a  rugged moral force that edged humanity higher on the plane of civilisation,  those who followed him either failed to live up to his philosophy or simply  destroyed his dream.  
           
          Transfiguring the Mandela  consciousness means boldly addressing global racial inequalities.  While  this cannot be the task of one nation, Britain is among the nation better  suited to lead this charge.   
           
          As Nelson Mandela taught  us:” 
           
  “No one is born hating  another person because of the colour of his skin, or his background, or his  religion.  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”. 
        End 
          
        
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