This item has closed with no items sold
View the relisted Item
View other items offered by Little Oribi560

Similar products

Lot: Mandela Material
New
R350.00
IN THE WORDS OF NELSON MANDELA
Secondhand
R30.00
Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela
Secondhand
R80.00
We Walk Straight so You Better Get Out the Way by Denis Hirson
Secondhand
R80.00
Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela
Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela
Closed

Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You' (Fatima Meer) Mandela

Secondhand 1 was available
R80.00
Shipping
R65.00 Standard shipping applies to orders under R100.00, in most areas in South Africa. R35.00 Standard shipping applies to orders over R100.00. Some areas may attract a surcharge surcharge. This will be calculated at checkout if applicable.
Check my rate
The seller allows collection for this item. Buyers will receive the collection address and time once the order is ready.
The seller has indicated that they will usually have this item ready to ship within 3 business days. Shipping time depends on your delivery address. The most accurate delivery time will be calculated at checkout, but in general, the following shipping times apply:
 
Standard Delivery
Main centres:  1-3 business days
Regional areas: 3-4 business days
Remote areas: 3-5 business days
Buyer protection
Get it now, pay later

Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Bob Shop ID
641218125

Fatima Meer, Higher than Hope: 'Rolihlahla We Love You'. Nelson Mandela's Biography on his 70th Birthday.

Johannesburg: Skotaville, 1988.

Soft cover, 328 pages, plates.

Wraps slightly chafed, pages lightly browned as usual. Good condition.

'In one of Nelson's letters to me in the early seventies, he expressed the opinion that an autobiography was an excuse for an ego trip. I wrote back disagreeing. Some autobiographies, I said, were a people's essential heritage. In any case what were his feelings about biographies?
A few months later I was at a mass meeting at the Bolton Hall in Durban, convened I think by the Black Consciousness group, for I have a clear recollection of Steve Biko on the platform. A message was whispered to me, from Nelson Mandela, I was told, sent through a newly-released prisoner. He would like me to write his biography. The prospect overawed me, though Nelson's confidence was flattering. Where and how did one even start making a beginning when the subject remained inaccessible? A few months later I made my one and only visit to Robben Island. Nelson said I should speak to Chief Sabata's mother; she was as his mother. His own mother was deceased by then. I didn't get the opportunity to visit the Transkei. Neither did I have the confidence to embark on so important an assignment. In early 1976, I was banned and confined to my neighbourhood in Sydenham. That same year, Winnie and I were among ten women detained at the Fort in Johannesburg. Towards the end of our five months detention, we had some opportunity to meet. We spent our time working on Winnie's biography/autobiography, but the work was suspended on our release. We returned to the conditions of our banning orders, in our different cities.
In 1984, when my ban expired, I visited Eveline and Makie Mandela in the Transkei and they took me to Mqekezweni where Nelson had spent his childhood. I wrote about the visit to Nelson. He replied:

My Dear Fatimaben,
Your nine page letter came when I was busy working on our reply to the State President's offer of release, and as important and urgent as the matter was, I instinctively pushed aside the draft until the following evening. Frankly, I just could no longer concentrate. The mind immediately went back many many years ago to a period in my life, the mere thought of which literally reduces one into a bundle of sheer sentiment. As you know there are two Transkeis. One is the political entity which emerged in the mid-50s and which sparked off ugly polemics ...'


Recently viewed

See more
Metal Enclosure Grey 279x150x75mm Bx 3920
New
R515.19
Ic reg boost adj vin=5.5v vo=28v 350ma 500khz 8umax/usop max1606eua
New
R83.11
Hole saw bi-metal 86mm
New
R203.84
Gold-Plated Buler Swiss Mechanical Pendant Watch
Secondhand
R1,450.00