During Nelson Mandela’s 19 years imprisoned on Robben Island, one
particular commanding officer was the most brutal of them all:
“A few days before Badenhorst’s departure, I was called to the
main office. General Steyn was visiting the island and wanted to know if we had
any complaints. Badenhorst was there as I went through a list of demands. When
I had finished, Badenhorst spoke to me directly.
He told me he would be leaving the island and added: ‘I just want
to wish you people good luck’. I do not know if I looked dumbfounded, but I was
amazed. He spoke these words like a human being and showed a side of himself we
had never seen before. I thanked him for his good wishes and wished him luck in
his endeavours.
I thought about this moment for a long time afterwards. Badenhorst
had perhaps been the most callous and barbaric commanding officer we had had on
Robben Island. But that day in the office, he had revealed that that there was
another side to his nature, a side that had been obscured but still existed.
It was a useful reminder that all men, even the most seemingly
cold-blooded, have a core of decency and that, if their hearts are touched,
they are capable of changing. Ultimately, Badenhorst was not evil; his inhumanity
had been foisted upon him by an inhuman system. He behaved like a brute because
he was rewarded for brutish behaviour.”
(Nelson Mandela, “Long Walk To Fredom”)
During Nelson Mandela’s 19 years imprisoned on Robben Island, one particular commanding officer was the most brutal of them all:
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