Nelson Mandela Was a High Ranking Communist
Despite decades of Nelson Mandela denying
that he was an official member of the South African Communist Party
(SACP) during his Soviet-backed war on the Apartheid government,
evidence uncovered recently by British historian Stephen Ellis shows
otherwise. The new research confirmed that not only was the African
National Congress (ANC) leader a member of the SACP, he may have
actually been a senior official working with the party’s Central
Committee.
Still, for 50 years, while admitting that he was influenced by
Marx and other communist luminaries, Mandela has denied — in public, at
least — that he was an actual member of the Communist Party. But now,
documents discovered at the University of Cape Town by Stephen Ellis, a
professor based at the Free University of Amsterdam, completely
contradict Mandela’s bogus claims.
Among other evidence, Ellis found minutes from a secret SACP
meeting of top leaders in 1982. The papers document a high-level
Communist Party functionary’s discussion about Mandela having joined the
SACP around 20 years earlier. That would mean he joined in the
beginning of the 1960s, probably 1961 or 1962, well before he was
prosecuted for, among numerous other crimes, membership in the outlaw
party backed by some of the most ruthless tyrants on the face of the
Earth.
“There was an accusation that we opposed allowing Nelson
[Mandela] and Walter [Sisulu, a fellow activist] into the Family [a code
word for the party],” Communist leader and SACP Central Committee
member John Pule Motshabi was quoted as saying in the minutes. “We were
not informed because this was arising after the 1950 campaigns [a series
of street protests]. The recruitment of the two came after.”
Experts including Ellis, who first identified and publicized the
documents, said it was some of the most compelling evidence to date
proving that Mandela was actually a member of the SACP. However, some
analysts attempted to dismiss the new finds as insignificant, portraying
the former South African president’s party membership as a mere
alliance of convenience that was supposedly necessary to overthrow the
existing government.
Had the proof been more widely disseminated decades ago, though,
it would have been much harder for the Western establishment, including
the U.S. government, to openly join forces with communist tyrants to
support the controversial figure in his often-brutal guerrilla war.
Indeed, if the world had only been paying attention, the signs would
have been obvious to even a casual observer.
Today, if the truth had been known back then, South Africa might
be a very different place, too. As The New American reported recently in
a series of articles citing some of the world’s foremost authorities on
the subject, the so-called “Rainbow Nation” is currently facing the
threat of both genocide and full-blown communism as white farmers are
massacred and ANC-SACP politicians plot more robbery.
“Communist parties are dogmatic organizations. They never move
anyone up to the central committee unless they know them to be die-hard
Communists,” explained anti-communist analyst Daniel Greenfield in a
piece for FrontPage magazine. “If Mandela was in the central committee,
then he was a longtime member in good standing who had proven himself.”
Of course, Mandela has long been accused of being a member of the
SACP, even by multiple party officials, going back about five decades.
His wife Winnie was famous for being a rabid proponent of “necklacing.”
The brutal punishment, used against fellow blacks who disagreed with the
ANC, involved placing a burning tire filled with gasoline around a
victim’s neck that killed slowly and painfully.
During Mandela’s prosecution for sabotage and treason,
prosecutors also produced a document written by the controversial figure
in which he actually boasted of being a Communist Party member. On
being released from prison, Mandela proclaimed at a rally: “I salute the
South African Communist Party for its sterling contribution to the
struggle for democracy.” He appeared (and was photographed) at multiple
rallies with SACP boss Joe Slovo in front of a giant hammer and sickle.
The ANC and its terrorist wing, founded and led by Mandela, were
dominated by the Communist Party as well, and the influence goes back
decades. “No major decision could be taken by the ANC without the
concurrence and approval of the Central Committee of the South African
Communist Party,” former ANC and SACP leader Bartholomew Hlapane
testified before the U.S. Congress before being executed by an assassin.
Support from the communist terror regimes ruling China, Cuba, and the
Soviet Union for Mandela, his ANC, and the SACP is also a matter of
historical record.
Today, unsurprisingly to analysts who were paying attention two
decades ago, the ANC rules South Africa in an unholy alliance with the
SACP and an umbrella group for labor unions. Numerous top officials,
including recent ANC presidents, have publicly admitted to also being
members of the SACP. South Africans of all colors are now paying the
price.
BY
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