Anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela ached to come home as his
remains were laid to rest in his childhood village yesterday, Sunday, 15
December 2013 in a blaze of glory.
Funeral and burial ended 10 days of mourning for South
Africa's first black president as more than 4,000 people gathered at Mandela's
funeral service in a tent in the Qunu hills. According to his family, they
believed his spirit was now at home.
The funeral was a final chance for those who knew him best to
say goodbye.
Mandela's daughter Maki said her father had always been a
country boy at heart, and wanted to return to his remote farm in the Eastern
Cape, one of South Africa's most rural areas.
"Even when my father was in jail, he had the fondest
memories of Qunu," she said. "And he really wanted to die here."
Pointing to a chair in the living room she said: "This
is Tata's special chair... he would sit like this, with a cushion here, because
he enjoyed looking out into the hills."
Mandela's casket lay in his bedroom overlooking those hills
overnight ahead of his funeral. Tribal elders held a vigil and a family prayer
service took place Sunday morning.
The state funeral service was held in a huge domed tent,
surrounded by cows grazing in the neighboring fields. Inside, 95 candles
burned, each representing one year of his life.
Inside that tent -- filled with the sweet scent of white
roses and lilies -- the Mandela family shared their grief with some 4,000
guests and television cameras broadcasting the service to the world.
Friends and family mourned alongside heads of state, royalty
and celebrities who had made their way along South Africa's back roads to
Mandela's burial place.
As well as being about family and loss, the state funeral
was a mixture of power and politics, of belonging and belief.
Mandela had a canny knack of building relationships and
among those at his funeral were those who represented the old apartheid order.
The great reconciliator continued to bring people together in death, just as he
had in life.
Mandela's burial, however, was private. A few hundred
mourners walked up the hills where he had played as a child to say goodbye.
Mandela's eldest daughter carried a reed mat that was laid
on the floor of the grave, evoking the sense Mandela was going to rest on a
traditional sleeping mat.
The television coverage turned skyward to catch a flypast of
planes and helicopters as Mandela was finally laid to rest, in a grave
surrounded by local plants designed to evoke the journey of his life.
Mandela's granddaughter Tukwini said it had been a challenge
to organize the funeral in the remote location "but my grandfather was
born here."
"This is where my grandfather told us who we were as
Mandelas," she explained.
Finally, after a life journey that was long, proud and
honored, Nelson Mandela is home. Hamba Kahle Tata. Lala Kahle Tata. Goodbye
father. Sleep well.
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