Changemakers Special Forgiveness Issue | Page 6

Forgiveness and the fight for freedom by Yee-Liu Williams A terrorist or a freedom fighter? Letlapa Mphahlele a black South African, atheist and ex-combatant demonised the people he was fighting against and stands as a controversial figure who ‘had no choice to armed and violent resistance’. From prisoner to guerrilla combatant, he rose from a fledgling cadre to senior command in the Azanian People’s Liberation Army (APLA) – the armed wing of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC). As a youth, on the run seeking refuge across the African continent he endured a turbulent, nomadic life in exile for nearly 20 years. He defied South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), in which individuals, in return for amnesty, can ‘declare their past crimes and admit remorse’, and escaped criminal sentence for his command in the Heidelberg Tavern massacre (1993) responsible for the killing of four civilians. Following Mandela’s release from prison in 1990, South Africa looked forward to its first multiracial elections with the hope and optimism for racial reconciliation in dismantling and tackling the decades of oppression, poverty and inequality. As an anti-Apartheid revolutionary, political thinker and philanthropist, Letlapa walks in the shadow of the late Mandela (Nobel Peace Prize,1993). With continuing violence and no ceasefire by the South African Defence Force (SADF), this triggered a train of retaliatory attacks by the black