Wednesday
Spurred by false reports of “white genocide” in South Africa, the Trump administration has been granting refugee status to white Afrikaners while denying it to others in far more desperate straits. While the country does suffer from high crime rates, whites are not suffering more than anyone else, and one only has to look at our own nation following the Civil War to realize how difficult such transitions can be. I find myself thinking how much worse it could have been had it not been for Nelson Mandela.
When Mandela died in 2013, I wrote a post on how he and his fellow Robben Island prisoners felt supported by various passages in Shakespeare, including Julius Caesar, Tempest, and Merchant of Venice. Only recently, however, did I register that Mandela also played Creon in a prison performance of Antigone. An old Guardian article notes that while Mandela appears more Antigone than the Theban king, nevertheless he may have learned leadership lessons from Creon that served his country.
For a refresher, Oedipus’s two sons have died fighting who is to rule Thebes. Next-in-line Creon decrees that the brother who attacked the city is a traitor and orders that his body remain unburied, contrary to divine law. Antigone, answering to a higher calling, violates the edict and performs funeral rites. As a result, she is buried alive in a tomb, and although Creon repents, he does so too late: Antigone, his son (who loves her), and his wife all commit suicide. At the end, as Creon is lamenting “on my head I feel the heavy weight of crushing Fate,” the Chorus weighs in with its moral:
There is no happiness where there is no wisdom;
No wisdom but in submission to the gods.
Big words are always punished,
And proud men in old age learn to be wise.
Antigone’s principled stand would have resonated with Mandela and his fellow prisoners, as would her arguments with her sister. Many South Africans were as fearful of joining the African National Congress (ANC) as Ismene is in joining Antigone’s rebellion. Note the following interchange, in which Ismene has just reminded her sister how they have already lost their father, mother, and both brothers:
Think how much more terrible than these
Our own death would be if we should go against Creon
And do what he has forbidden! We are only women,
We cannot fight with men, Antigone!
The law is strong, we must give in to the law
In this thing, and in worse. I beg the Dead
To forgive me, but I am helpless: I must yield
To those in authority. And I think it is dangerous business
To be always meddling.
To which Antigone responds:
If that is what you think,
I should not want you, even if you asked to come.
You have made your choice, you can be what you want to be.
But I will bury him; and if I must die,
I say that this crime is holy: I shall lie down
With him in death, and I shall be as dear
To him as he to me.
And further on:
I am not afraid of the danger; if it means death,
It will not be the worst of deaths ––death without honor.
In reading this last response, I am put in mind of a passage from Julius Caesar that bolstered Mandela during his long imprisonment:
Cowards die many times before their deaths;
The valiant never taste of death but once.
In the Guardian article, author André Brink notes that Mandela had an “Antigone streak” from an early age:
But the Antigone streak that was to become in a way his trademark soon asserted itself – whether in defying his guardian by refusing the bride assigned to him, or in standing up to police, prison warders or the leaders of the apartheid regime by refusing to obey orders he regarded as unfair. These occasions never demonstrated a mere disregard for authority, but a considered refusal to condone the abuse of power; an assertion of personal dignity that not even the harshest punishment in prison could dent.
Yet for all his Antigone qualities, I find even more interesting how Mandela was also a Creon. Here’s a passage that Mandela would have delivered when he was acting out the king:
I am aware, of course, that no Ruler can expect complete loyalty from his subjects until he has been tested in office. Nevertheless, I say to you at the very outset that I have nothing but contempt for the kind of Governor who is afraid, for whatever reason, to follow the course that he knows is best for the State; and as for the man who sets private friendship above the public welfare, ––I have no use for him, either. I call God to witness that if I saw my country headed for ruin, I should not be afraid to speak out plainly; and I need hardly remind you that I would never have any dealings with an enemy of the people. No one values friendship more highly than I; but we must remember that friends made at the risk of wrecking our Ship are not real friends at all.
Creon’s words on the responsibilities of a leader resonate with us now. Because our leaders didn’t hold Trump accountable for attempting to wreck our ship in 2021—because they didn’t put public welfare first—he is taking us all down in 2026. Mandela, on the other hands, echoes Creon in the following statement, found in his autobiography The Long Walk:
There are times a leader must move out ahead of the flock, go off in a new direction, confident that he is leading his people the right way.
Brink lays out the risks Mandela was taking when he initiated meetings with South Africa’s white leadership, thereby moving out ahead of the ANC:
He knew only too well, he told me, even more emphatically than he’d intimated in his writings, that he was really duty-bound to obtain permission from the ANC leadership first before embarking on such a radical initiative. But he also knew that the ANC would never consent. And so he had to place his own future at risk, knowing that if the endeavor failed, or ever became known too early, any future role he might have hoped to play would be forfeited….What in some people, or in some situations, would amount to megalomania, may in others turn out to be a visionary decision.
From Brink’s account of Mandela, I can see how he learned from both Creon and Antigone, both the positives and the negatives. Through the Truth and Reconciliation process, he rejected Creon-like draconian punishments. At the same time, he was more practical—although no less principled—than Antigone. He also didn’t have her self-righteousness, which we see when she confronts Creon:
This talking is a great weariness: your words
Are distasteful to me, and I am sure that mine
Seem so to you. And yet they should not seem so:
I should have praise and honor for what I have done.
All these men here would praise me
Were their lips not frozen shut with fear of you.
[Bitterly.]
Ah the good fortune of kings,
Licensed to say and do whatever they please!
For comparative purposes, check out this passage from Mandela’s speech before his own court, which found him guilty and sent him to prison for 27 years. Note that it lacks Antigone’s bitterness:
During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But, if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”
Writing in 2000 after Mandela’s presidency had come to an end, Brink observes that, while he made mistakes, he accomplished far more than could reasonably have been expected given the impossibility of the task:
One need only take a small step back to compare South Africa today with the country of less than a decade ago to realize how much has been achieved. If programs for housing, health care, job creation or the reconstruction of education still lag behind the forecasts of five years ago, at least the groundwork has been done, the infrastructure provided, on which the real edifice can now take shape.
Part of Mandela’s success lay in how he was able to face up to where he’d gone wrong. Brink tells the story, recounted by one of Mandela’s three private secretaries, how every night he would ask them, “Now tell me what I have done wrong today, because I don’t want to make the same mistakes tomorrow.” In other words, he follows the advice that the seer Teiresias offers Creon:
Think: all men make mistakes,
But a good man yields when he knows his course is wrong,
And repairs the evil. The only crime is pride.
Classicist Edith Hall, in Aristotle’s Way: How Ancient Wisdom Can Change Your Life, believes that the ancient Greek tragedies offered training in deliberate decision-making and for that reason were seen as vital to Athenian society, given how it was dependent on its popular council. By getting caught up in his pride, Creon would have served as a negative object lesson for Greek citizens. I can very well imagine Mandela absorbing important leadership lessons as he performed the role.










