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RESPECT TO MANDELA IN LONDON.

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Cape Town crowds pay respects to Mandela

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CAPE TOWN – One of Cape Town's central meeting places is City Hall, from which Nelson Mandela made his first public appearance after his release from prison in 1990. From the balcony, the anti-apartheid icon greeted the crowd gathered on the large open area known as the Grand Parade.
Since Friday morning, Capetonians have gathered here to pay their respects. On Saturday, a steady stream came to place flowers and mementos, to sign condolences and to share their memories with one another. They used words like "volunteer," "love," "defiance" and "action" when talking about the man many called father of the nation.
Like many people originally from South Africa's Eastern Cape province, where Mandela was born and where he will be buried, Lutho Masiko, an environmental health student, plans to head to the former president's burial as well.
"If you ask kids, 'Who's your role model?,' the first person is always Madiba," he said, using Mandela's clan name. "When I ask my younger sister and brother, you'd expect them to say, 'You, big brother,' but no, it's Madiba," he said with a laugh.
The most important lesson Masiko said he learned from Mandela is forgiveness. "It's something I struggle with. As I learned more of what he handled and how, it impacted me."
Masiko described the mood on Friday as celebratory. "We were celebrating a leader. Rejoicing, praising him."
Marius Fransman, South Africa's Deputy Minister of International Relations, took off his baseball cap before placing a bouquet of flowers on the ground.
"We are saddened that our leader, our hero, the revolutionary, the servant of all servants, [is] just no more," Fransman said. "Six months ago we had a difficult period where he was so ill, but he was still fighting, he was battling it out."
"Tata (Father) Madiba was an internationalist," Fransman went on to say. "He understood that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. South Africa will only be free if we free the people of Palestine. Unity, justice, inequality; he was against oppression."
Michael Stevenson, of Chicago, first visited South Africa in 1991 and returned again on Thursday.
"The minute we landed in Johannesburg, the captain came on to say, 'For those who don't know, what happened last night was the passing of Nelson Mandela,'" said Stevenson. "There was an eerie calm (on) the airplane. A few gasps of disbelief. And then, of course, we all got out our hand-held devices and started checking our emails, seeing the news."
Megan Langenhoven, 28, felt "immense sadness" when she heard the news.
"It touches you as if you are losing your own family member," Langenhoven said. "(Mandela's) daughter said she was 18 months old when he went to prison. I can't imagine leaving my son behind," she said, gesturing to her young son in a stroller.
Ellen Graziano, of Rockville Center, N.Y., had just arrived on her first trip to South Africa when she heard of Mandela's death. "He was so monumental to equality. It's very special that I'm able to share this historical moment," she said.
The public are invited to continue to visit the Grand Parade throughout the week. An interfaith prayer and song session is planned for Sunday evening.
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