Obama to speak at Mandela lecture
The US's first black President Barack Obama will deliver the annual
Nelson Mandela lecture in South Africa's main city, Johannesburg, on 17
July to honour the centennial of the anti-apartheid icon's birth, the
Nelson Mandela Foundation has said.
The @NelsonMandela Foundation is honoured to announce that President Barack Obama accepted our invitation to be the speaker at this year’s The 16th Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture to take place in Johannesburg on 17 July, ahead of Madiba’s birthday - @SelloHatang @ObamaFoundation pic.twitter.com/HFdgk1YJ9h— NelsonMandela (@NelsonMandela) April 23, 2018
The foundation's chief executive, Sello Hatang, said the foundation
had been looking for someone with "an Africa heritage" to deliver the
address.
"We thought who can [better] represent the legacy of
Madiba than the person who we believe took on the baton when he became
president of his own country," Mr Hatang said, referring to Mr Mandela
by his clan name.
The lecture will focus on "creating conditions
for bridging divides, working across ideological lines, and resisting
oppression and inequality", the foundation added in a statement.
Mr Hatang told AFP news agency that Mr Mandela was "elated" when Mr
Obama was elected in 2008 "because he saw it as a moment in American
history".
"We hope that it will again be a significant moment for the two legacies to join," he said.
Mr Mandela became South Africa's first black president following the end of the racist system of apartheid in 1994.
He spent 27 years in prison for fighting for the freedom of black people.
Mr Mandela died in 2013 at the age of 95.
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