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Mandela, Mbeki laud 90-year-old mentor Sisulu

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (Reuters) -- Walter Sisulu, frail and bent, sat
quietly at his 90th birthday party on Saturday as Nelson Mandela and
President Thabo Mbeki lauded him for a life devoted to casting the yoke of
apartheid off South Africa.

Sisulu smiled and graciously accepted a stream of well-wishers, who wanted
to kiss him or shake his hand, as he sat comfortably in a deep leather
chair that gives massages -- a present from the African National Congress
(ANC).

Before Sisulu received his presents, Mandela, South Africa's first black
president, and Mbeki told nearly 1,000 invited guests of the role Sisulu
played in organizing resistance to apartheid, his treason trial in 1964,
his imprisonment and his release in 1989.

Sisulu was the first person employed by the ANC and served as its
secretary-general.

Convicted of political sabotage and revolution after the ANC decided the
white-minority apartheid regime could only be removed by armed struggle,

Sisulu and other leaders of the party faced the death penalty but refused
to plead for mercy.

Mandela, whose policies of reconciliation soothed a country fraught with
racial tensions after the first democratic elections in 1994, paid homage
to Sisulu as a mentor.

"He knew and taught us that wisdom comes from sharing insights and
listening and learning from each other," Mandela said, referring
affectionately to Sisulu by his clan name of Xhamela.

"Some of us here became president of the ANC and government but Xhamela
always had a position higher than that ... He pushed forward Thabo and
myself and he always stayed in the background," the 83-year-old Mandela said.

In a poetic address, Mbeki sang Sisulu's praises, saying he "taught us that
we should live our lives gently, with fire, and always with hope."

The snowy-haired patriarch, who is head of five generations, has spent a
busy week at parties and speeches in his honor.

The party was attended by dozens in the hierarchy of the ruling ANC -- many
of whom carried large wrapped gifts.

Mac Maharaj, who has known Sisulu since 1964 and spent 12 years in a prison
on Robben Island, said the ANC veteran was also a mentor to him and always
had a ready smile in prison.

"But his softness must never be mistaken for lack of determination. He had
a way of maintaining our firmness with a sense of consideration and
sensitivity, a supreme diplomat who influenced our struggle greatly,"
Maharaj told Reuters.

Sisulu, who is struggling with Parkinson's disease, was helped by his wife
of 57 year, Albertina, and son Max to cut a giant birthday cake after being
brought in a wheelchair to a low stage surrounded by gifts.

Renowned author and the 1991 winner of the Nobel literature prize, Nadine
Gordimer -- a card-carrying member of the ANC -- said Sisulu had brought
hope, even in the darkest days of apartheid.

"He is a great hero, one of those extraordinary people who made it always
worth while to live in this country, even in the worst of times of
oppression when we felt that change was so far off.

"Sisulu and people like Mandela always made one feel that change and
justice was coming," she told Reuters.

Copyright 2002 Reuters
Copyright 2002 Cable News Network LP, LLLP
An AOL Time Warner Company
http://www.cnn.com/

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