The 46664 Bangle is the official bracelet engraved with Nelson Mandela's prisoner number, 46664, and a laser image of his hand. 46664 is a symbol for Mr. Mandela's global charity efforts and humanitarian work, including the prevention of HIV AIDS. Every sale of a 46664 Bangle contributes funds to this campaign, creates jobs, and continues the message of social responsibility worldwide. Buy the Bangle, Change a Life.

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Posts Tagged ‘apartheid’

Nelson Mandela Foundation Recommends Book As Compelling Read

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

Head of the Nelson Mandela Foundation’s Memory Programme, Verne Harris, spoke recently on the subject “Madiba, Memory and the Work of Justice” at the 18th Alan Paton Lecture.

Harris has also recommended Hugh Lewin’s new book, Stones against the Mirror: Friendship in the Time of the South African Struggle, one of several new autobiographies and biographies about the South African struggle.  

Lewin’s book is described as, “exemplary… offers a sustained reflection on memory and evidence, and confronts the inevitable fictional fashioning which informs any and every work of narrating the past.” 

Source: The Nelson Mandela Foundation

Nelson Mandela’s Private Documents Published – “I’m No Saint”

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Nelson Mandela looks at his newly-released book, Conversations With Myself, October 2010

On October 12th, 2010, for the very first time, Nelson Mandela’s hidden archives will be published in a new book, Conversations With Myself. 

The collection of notes from prison and deeply personal diaries expose the private man behind the icon we fondly call Madiba.  

Letters penned in jail by Nelson Mandela reveal his anguish at being separated from his family, and readers will feel the intensity of the pain he was going through in prison. 

The anti-apartheid icon wrote of his heartache at learning of the death of his 24-year old son in a car crash in 1969. He was not allowed to attend the funeral. 

Nelson Mandela pushed for the archives to be opened and published in a new book. Aside from sharing his sorrow and suffering, we also see Nelson Mandela as a human being, as he urges the world not to view him as a saint. 

“One issue that deeply worried me in prison was the false image I unwittingly projected to the outside world; of being regarded as a saint,” said the Nobel Peace Prize winner, aged 92.

“I never was one, even on the basis of the earthly definition of a saint as a sinner who keeps trying. As a young man, I combined all the weaknesses, errors and indiscretions of a country boy, whose range of vision and experience was influenced mainly by events in the area in which I grew up and the colleges to which I was sent,” he wrote.

“I relied on arrogance to hide my weaknesses,” he added. 

Per this BBC video, “The real man, flawed and human, is actually far more remarkable, far more inspiring than the cliché of some untouchable saint”.

This Week: 48-Year Anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s Arrest

Friday, August 6th, 2010

On 5th August 1962, Nelson Mandela was arrested in South Africa, marking the beginnng of his 27 years imprisonment.

Photo: David Turnley-Corbis

The Nelson Mandela Foundation urges us to acknowledge the sacrifices of all those who brought about democracy to South Africa. We can do that by trying to “make every day a Mandela Day”. When we see this as an opportunity to do something good for our community, especially for those less fortunate than us, then we continue the spirit of Mandela Day – long after the official date of July 18th.

The words of Nelson Mandela 48 years ago in what became known as his “Black man in a white man’s court” speech: “Whatever sentence Your Worship sees fit to impose upon me for the crime for which I have been convicted before this court, may it rest assured that when my sentence has been completed I will still be moved, as men are always moved, by their consciences; I will still be moved by my dislike of the race discrimination against my people when I come out from serving my sentence, to take up again, as best I can, the struggle for the removal of those injustices until they are finally abolished once and for all.”

As we support the 46664 Bangle project and the 46664 campaign messages about equality, social responsibility and justice, these words inspire us to make every day a Mandela Day, and make a difference in the lives of others.

World Cup Delight As Family Confirms Mandela Will Attend Opening

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

It’s just 2 days away from the opening of the world’s biggest sporting event, the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. Vuvuzelas are abuzz, spontaneous displays of diski and waka waka dances abound, and the Nelson Mandela bridge in Johannesburg is draped with a gigantic banner of a smiling Madiba. Football Fever is everywhere as national pride explodes across South Africa.

But what has been missing for the last few weeks? Absolute confirmation that South Africa’s most famous citizen, former president Nelson Mandela, would be at the Soccer City stadium’s opening ceremony. A “will he, won’t he?” rumble rippled across the internet as people held their breath, waiting to hear whether the 91-year-old inspirational leader would make an appearance.

Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg June 8, 2010 Photo: GETTY

Today, a collective cheer could be heard around the world as Nelson Mandela’s family announced that he would be in the audience at the opening ceremony. His grandson, Mandla Mandela, said his grandfather “will come and greet the fans”, then will watch the rest of the game from his home. Nelson Mandela Foundation spokesman, Sello Hating, confirmed the statesman’s attendance but said a final decision will only be taken on the day.

FIFA President, Sepp Blatter, has described Mandela as “the architect of World Cup 2010” and a major influence in bringing the World Cup to the African continent for the first time. Nelson Mandela is a global icon for human rights, reconciliation, diversity, respect and freedom – all of which are powerful qualities to add to the excitement of World Cup 2010 through his presence on June 11th.

Can South African Rugby Once Again Show the Power of Sport in Uniting People?

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

In South Africa, rugby – the hooligan’s game played by gentlemen – has traditionally been a sport favored mostly by whites, and the years of apartheid rule reinforced it as a sport not available to “non-whites”. All of that changed when Nelson Mandela stepped onto the field of the 1995 Rugby World Cup final match, smiling and wearing the green and gold jersey of the Springboks, the country’s national rugby team.

This powerful gesture of support, unexpected throughout the racial spectrum of South Africa, served as an act of reconciliation – euphorically uniting South Africans of all races on that day and suggesting a path of tolerance as the country worked on adopting its newly-established democracy.

Fifteen years later, although all eyes are on soccer as South Africa prepares to host the esteemed World Cup 2010 soccer event, this is also rugby season and this month is the prestigious Super 14 tournament. For the semi-final, the Blue Bulls rugby team announced it has chosen Orlando Stadium as its host venue – a stadium in the heart of Soweto, the country’s largest black township. It will be an unusual setting for a predominantly white team and its supporters, but it is being seen by some as a gesture of racial reconciliation.

Francois Pienaar, the Springbok captain whose shirt Mandela wore at the 1995 rugby final, told The Sunday Telegraph: “It is great news, so exciting and proves once again the power of sport in cutting across boundaries and uniting people.”

“The 16th Man” Documentary Film About Nelson Mandela and 1995 Rugby World Cup

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Nelson Mandela pays a surprise visit to the Springbok rugby team's practice session, 1995

Aptly titled, this new documentary (out this week on ESPN) refers to the extra special magic Nelson Mandela provided as an honorary member of the 15-man rugby team in South Africa.  If the theme sounds vaguely familiar, you may be thinking of Invictus; Clint Eastwood’s Oscar-nominated film which was released last year, telling the gritty story of how Nelson Mandela and the 1995 Rugby World Cup helped South Africa’s healing process as the country struggled to find its feet in its newly-established democracy. 

Even though some of us were in South Africa at the time and actually at that momentous World Cup final match in 1995, watching the celluloid rendition of this powerful political-sporting story 15 years later still induced some hard-to-believe moments. To the uninitiated, it must have seemed such an unlikely story, so perfect that it could only have been fabricated by Hollywood.  And yet, the events happened (pretty much) the way Mr Eastwood portrayed it. 

The 16th Man documentary  is directed by Cliff Bestall and its drier, journalistic tone gives credibility to this tale that might otherwise be dismissed as exaggerated cheesiness straight out of Hollywood. Perhaps more fantastic than the movie Invictus or The 16th Man documentary is the fact that this story happened at all, and how different the outcome may have been for South Africa had it not been for “Madiba” (Nelson Mandela) striding out on to the field that day, in his green and gold Springbok rugby shirt. 

“Who would have ever imagined that people would be dancing in the streets in Soweto for a rugby victory of a Springbok side?” asks Bishop Desmond Tutu rhetorically. “But they did!” 

Produced by 46664 Bangle supporters, Morgan Freeman and Lori McCreary, The 16th Man promises to deliver an inspiring story – don’t miss it!

Sixteen Years Later, Mandela Still A Global Icon

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

On May 3 in 1994, Nelson Mandela announced victory in South Africa’s first democratic all-race elections. Today, the Nelson Mandela Foundation charities continue working for his ideals and beliefs - advocating equality, and building a just society in the spirit of reconciliation, ubuntu.

Nelson Mandela won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 for his critical role in establishing newfound democracy peacefully in South Africa, along with former President F W de Klerk.

Nelson Mandela’s Robben Island prison number, 46664, has become an international symbol of hope for his global charity efforts; partnering with individuals, corporations and governments to collectively focus on HIV/AIDS prevention and address social responsibility. The 46664 Bangle initiative is proud to support those campaigns through the sale of 46664-engraved wrist bracelets manufactured in South Africa.

Turning 92 this year, Mr Mandela enjoys this quiet period of his life with his family in South Africa, and yet his vision continues worldwide - with people celebrating Nelson Mandela Day on his birthday, July 18th.


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