Home / Full timeline / Nelson Mandela conducts a 10-day tour of the U.S. to convince Americans to maintain sanctions against the white-minority government in South Africa until its racial apartheid system is dismantled.
Nelson Mandela conducts a 10-day tour of the U.S. to convince Americans to maintain sanctions against the white-minority government in South Africa until its racial apartheid system is dismantled.
1990 (Jun 20-30)
Nelson Mandela, deputy president of the African National Congress (ANC) and the major symbol of the struggle for freedom in the Republic of South Africa, conducted a major tour of the United States. The ten-day foray was designed to convince Americans to maintain sanctions against the white-minority government in South Africa until its racial apartheid system was dismantled, and to raise money to assist the ANC's campaign for majority rule. On June 20, Mandela was feted to a ticker tape parade in downtown New York City, where approximately 750,000 people lined the parade routes to greet him. He told crowds that apartheid in his country was "doomed," and that with the aid of supporters in the United States, “we have made the government listen, and we have broken the walls of the South African jails.” On June 22, the South African freedom fighter addressed the United Nations (UN). He cautioned that “nothing which has happened in South Africa calls for a revision of the position that this organization has taken in the struggle against apartheid.” During the almost three decades that Mandela was in prison, the UN consistently adopted resolutions opposing South African apartheid and the many speeches by delegates and others against the system usually ended in the refrain, "Free Mandela." Mandela was in Boston, Massachusetts, on June 23, where his hosts included Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, widow of slain president John F. Kennedy, and the late president's brother, Massachusetts senator Edward "Ted” Kennedy. Mandela told audiences, “We lower our banners in memory of Crispus Attucks [a Black American), the first victim to fall in your Revolutionary War," and "given the illustrious history of this city, it is only natural that we consider ourselves as visiting our second home.” He also looked forward to a South Africa that was "free from all forms of racism and sexism. We do not seek to dominate whites in our country. We intend to live true to this principal to the end of our day." On June 25, Mandela arrived in Washington, D.C., where he was greeted by, among others, Randall Robinson, head of TransAfrica, the principal anti-apartheid organization in the United States. The South African leader met President George Bush on June 26. While Bush hailed Mandela's freedom and again denounced the apartheid system, he asked that “all elements in South African society ... renounce the use of violence in armed struggle, break free from the cycle of repression and violent reaction that breeds nothing but more fear and suffering.” In making his plea, Bush quoted slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.: “Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.” In his response, Mandela said Bush's remarks resulted from him not getting “a proper briefing from us." He added that when a government prohibits free political activity, “the people have no alternative but to resort to violence.” The two met for three hours, after which Mandela said they had reached substantial agreement on most issues. Before leaving the capital, Mandela addressed a joint session of the U.S. Congress on June 26. He invoked the names of Frederick Douglass, Thomas Jefferson, Joe Louis, and other American heroes, and repeated his plea for a continuation of sanctions against the white-minority government in South Africa. He received several thunderous standing ovations. On June 27, Mandela visited Atlanta, Georgia, “the capital of the Civil Rights Movement,” where he laid a wreath at King's tomb, received honorary degrees from about a third of the nation's historically Black colleges, and addressed a rally of more than 50,000 people. In his brief remarks to the mostly Black crowd, Mandela made frequent references to King, and said, “We are ... conscious that here in the southern part of the country, you have experienced the degradation of racial segregation. We continue to be inspired by the knowledge that in the face of your own difficulties, you are in the forefront of the anti-apartheid movement in this country.” Then, drawing upon King's famous "I Have a Dream” oration, Mandela declared, “Let Freedom ring. Let us all acclaim now, 'Let freedom ring in South Africa. Let freedom ring wherever people's rights are trampled upon.'" On June 28, Mandela made brief visits to Miami Beach, Florida, where he spoke to the annual convention of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), and to Detroit, Michigan, where he addressed a rally of 50,000 people. In Miami, he repeated his call for continued sanctions against South Africa and thanked the American labor unions which had refused to handle materials destined for South Africa and lent financial support to his struggle. About 250 anti-Castro Cubans and Cuban Americans protested Mandela's visit, however, because he had expressed gratitude for the Cuban dictator's support of the anti-apartheid movement and refused to denounce him during an appearance on an ABC-TV “Nightline” segment. A crowd of 2,000 demonstrators, mostly Black, chanted to the beat of an African drum and waved colorful flags in support of Mandela. There were only a few minor clashes between the two groups. In Detroit, Mandela met Rosa Parks, the Alabama seamstress who sparked the famed Montgomery bus boycott. While visiting the Ford Rouge plant, one of the oldest automobile factories in the country, he told members of the United Auto Workers, another anti-apartheid union, that he was their "comrade ... your flesh and blood." Later that evening, Mandela and his entourage were honored at a rally held at Tiger Stadium. June 29–30, Mandela ended his American tour in California, with stops in Los Angeles and Oakland. He spoke to 80,000 people at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, after declaring that he was on the “last leg of an exhausting but exhilarating tour.” He also said, “Our masses in action are like a raging torrent. We are on freedom road, and nothing is going to stop us from reaching our destination.” As he prepared to leave the United States, Mandela indicated that he would probably return in October 1990 to receive a $100,000 award from the Gandhi Memorial International Foundation in New York and to meet with several Native American leaders. He declared that he was 'very disturbed” about the condition of the Native American. While some Americans either expressed grave concern or opposition to Mandela's views, particularly his refusal to denounce Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi, Libya's “pro-terrorist” leader, Yassar Arafat, leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and Cuban dictator Fidel Castro, and his unwillingness to abandon the use of violence in his struggle, the South African leader was very warmly received by most Americans on his tour. In New York, eighteen-year-old Tanera Ford remarked, “I'm glad to see so many Black people here. ... To have all these people together for something positive, it just makes me feel great." In Atlanta, Joseph E. Lowery, president of the SCLC, told Mandela, “We reject the constant nagging that you have experienced about denouncing violence." Finally, in Detroit, Quirita Quates, a young dancer, said the South African anti-apartheid leader was "just the greatest man in the world."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.