The remains of George
Bizos, the “hero” anti-apartheid lawyer, who represented Nelson Mandela at his trial for treason, has been laid to rest after a state funeral filled with emotional tributes.
Bizos, a revered, soft-spoken figure, died at his
Johannesburg home last week of natural causes at the age of 92.
His flag-draped coffin was wheeled into a Greek community
hall by military pall-bearers on Thursday, with President Cyril Ramaphosa in attendance, before it was driven to a
cemetery on a ceremonial military gun carriage.
Speakers before a small gathering of family and other
dignitaries — due to coronavirus restrictions — paid heartfelt tributes to the
man who became Mandela’s personal friend and defended human rights to the end
of his life.
Ramaphosa described Bizos as a “hero”, a “lover of freedom”
and likened him to a “baobab tree”.
“We are here to celebrate and also to bid farewell to a
titan of the legal profession whose defence of the cause of justice was as
tenacious and it was lifelong,” said Ramaphosa.
At the height of the apartheid era, Bizos secured a life
sentence for Mandela and others fighting white-minority rule at the landmark
Rivonia Trial in 1964.
Against all expectations, the defendants were spared the
death penalty and instead given long jail terms — a verdict that turned them
into the living embodiment of the anti-apartheid struggle.
– Mandela ‘waiting to welcome you’ –
Bizos arrived in South Africa as a 13-year-old war refugee
from Greece and trained as a lawyer.
In a long career, he represented a string of activists
against the white-minority regime and later helped draw up the constitution of
post-apartheid South Africa.
For 30 years, he struggled to acquire South African
citizenship — thanks to his activism against the white minority regime.
“The apartheid government punished him quite severely by
denying him citizenship for over three decades and there he was living
stateless in a country that he had adopted,” Ramaphosa said.
The regime told him “he was not fit and proper to become a
South African citizen,” said the president.
Yet Bizos was a “patriot” and “the embodiment of a fit and
proper South African citizen,” Ramaphosa said.
He continued working until he was past 90 years old, with
one of his last major cases securing government payouts in 2014 for the
families of 34 miners gunned down two years earlier.
His passing further reduces the number of surviving leaders
of the apartheid struggle, whose status wields huge moral and political
influence in modern-day South Africa.
The speech was electrifying, notably Mandela’s often-cited
lines on his hope for democracy: “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.”
Bizos would say later that he advised Mandela to avoid
challenging the court over the possibility of a death sentence by adding the
words “if needs be”.
In his autobiography “Long Walk to Freedom” (1994), Mandela
describes Bizos as a lifelong friend and “a man who combined a sympathetic
nature with an incisive mind”.
Bizos continued to represent Mandela throughout his
27-year-jail term and also acted on behalf of his wife, Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela, on more than 20 occasions.
Ramaphosa concluded his eulogy saying: “Madiba your friend
of 65 years is waiting to welcome you”.
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