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Mandela spends Christmas in hospital

Mandela: greater than Awo?

Ailing African icon Nelson Mandela is spending Christmas Day in hospital, his longest stay in care since being released from prison in 1990.

It was the first time since his release from Robben Island in 1990 that he would spend Christmas away from home and family.

Mandela: still hospitalized on Christmas day
The 94-year-old Nobel Peace laureate and South Africa’s first black post-apartheid president, was admitted to a Pretoria hospital on December 8. He has been treated there for a recurrent lung infection and had surgery to remove gallstones.

In a statement President Jacob Zuma said his predecessor “continues to respond to treatment”.

“Knowledge of the love and support of his people keeps him strong,” Zuma said.

“We urge all South Africans to keep Tata (father) uppermost in their thoughts at every place of worship or entertainment tomorrow on Christmas Day, and throughout the festive season.

“We also humbly invite all freedom loving people around the world to pray for him. He is an ardent fighter and will recover from this episode with all our support,” Zuma said.

There was no indication of when he might be discharged.

Today, Zuma and family members of the ailing leader visited him in hospital.

Afterwards Zuma said Mandela was in “good spirits”..

“He was happy to have visitors on this special day and is looking much better. The doctors are happy with the progress that he is making,” said Zuma, who joined Mandela’s wife Graca Machel and the family on the visit to his Pretoria hospital.

“We found him in good spirits,” said Zuma in a statement.

“He remains in hospital, recovering,” presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj told AFP on Monday. “I can’t say when he will be discharged, doctors will make that decision.”

Only limited details of Mandela’s condition have been made public by the South African government, which has repeatedly called on the public to respect the former president’s privacy.

Before his retirement in 2004 Mandela used to host a Christmas feast in his home village of Qunu for impoverished children — a highlight for many.

Since retiring from public life, Christmas has been a more low-key affair, spent with family.

Neither tradition will be repeated this year.

While many South Africans have resigned themselves to the idea of life without the country’s most respected citizen, he remains highly esteemed and was the subject of many prayers.

On Monday churchgoers at the renowned Regina Mundi Catholic Church in Soweto sent him messages of love and support after mass.

Others, including local celebrities, have taken to social networking sites to wish Madiba — the clan name he is fondly known by — a speedy recovery.

“Thinking of Madiba tonight, prayers that he gets well soon just in time for Christmas,” wrote radio and television personality Jeannie D.

Mandela, who became South Africa’s first black president after the country’s first all-race elections in 1994, has a long history of lung problems.

He contracted tuberculosis — a disease which killed his father — while in jail as a political prisoner.

The former statesman was later hospitalised for an acute respiratory infection in January 2011, when he was held for two nights.

Mandela was last seen in public in 2010, clad in a scarf during the closing ceremony of the FIFA World Cup, when he was wheeled into the stadium in a golf cart.

In May, footage of a smiling, grey-haired Madiba seated on a couch, was shown on television when he was visited by ruling ANC leaders to present him with a symbolic flame to mark the party’s 100 years.

Mandela stepped down in 1999 after serving one term as president.

Meanwhile, Nelson Mandela’s grandson, Mandla Mandela, said his family was humbled by the overwhelming support and messages of goodwill globally received since Mandela was admitted into hospital.

He said though Mandela could not be with his family during this Christmas “the family home in Qunu will be warm as usual”.

“We have overwhelming support not only from the province, nationally, but also internationally. We hope that the prayers that we’ve been receiving will ensure that he recovers. The priority is to ensure his well-being, and he is returned home in good health,” he said.

The Mandela family gave 100 wheelchairs to the Empilweni Old Age Home in Mthatha, Eastern Cape.

The initiative was a partnership between the Mandela Family and the Provincial Department of Social Development.

“Madiba’s legacy of giving to the needy put smiles on the faces of elderly people in Mthatha. We are following in the footsteps of my grandpa. He used to host a Christmas party for the elderly and children.We are doing this to show that we still care, and we want him to know that we are doing what he loves,” Mandla Mandela said.

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