Mandela Asks, Who Taught You
to Hate?
Lesson #11 January 8, 2014
Mandela: I speak to the people of Africa.
Who taught you to hate?
Your father? Your mother?
Your teacher?
A different tribe?
Someone from outside your country?
Where are those who died with hate in their hearts?
Mandela: Dear Nazira, come with me. Let us visit a man who died with hate in his heart. Where do you think he is now?
Nazira: I have travelled to that place before, with an Archangel. He taught me how to help those who cannot learn to love without some angelic guidance. We can go together.
Mandela: Would you like to show me the way?
Nazira: No, sir. An archangel must accompany us, until we are approved to go by ourselves. I will call Archangel Gabriel, he is my Protector.
Nazira: [Archangel stands before us, very tall, gowned in cream and gold.]
Gabriel: Greetings, little one. Do you have a new assignment today?
Nazira: Nelson Mandela, newly arrived, would like to visit a young man in Africa who cannot remove hate from his heart. He thinks that perhaps he can help the young man.
Gabriel: Come with me.
Nazira: [We “glide” to a gate, Gabriel opens it and we pass through. Immediately we glide downward, into what appears to be a lonely valley. There are rocks and gravel on the ground, no trees, it is damp and dreary. Mandela points to a young African.]
Mandela: I would like to visit him
.
Nazira: [Gabriel steps back, allowing us to visit the young man alone.]
Mandela: [Speaking to the young man.] Greetings, I am Nelson Mandela.
Young Man: I don’t care who you are.
Mandela: Are you alone?
Young Man: None of your business.
Mandela: How long have you been here?
Young Man: Too long.
Mandela: What is your name?
Young man: Nobody.
Mandela: [Looks for Archangel Gabriel. He cannot see him. He looks at me with an inquisitive look.]
Young Man: Who are you?
Nazira: [Because I have left my cloak and mantle at home, I appear to him as an angel.]
Young Man: Are you an angel?
Nazira: I am to you. We have come to take you from here.
Young Man: They will shoot us if we try to escape.
Nazira: Who will shoot you?
Young Man: The enemy.
Nazira: There is no one else here.
Young Man: They are behind the rocks.
Nazira: Do you see that light over there [pointing].
Young Man: It’s always there. It doesn’t mean anything.
Nazira: Go to the light. If you wish, Nelson Mandela and I will go with you.
Young Man: [Looked at both of us.] You are not bad people.
Mandela: Son, I know what it is like to hate. Some hateful people put me in prison for 27 years.
Young Man: Are you Nelson Mandela?
Mandela: Yes son, I am. The angel and I want to show you what love is, so that you can have some of it.
Young Man: [He looked at us, as if he was thinking, “What have I got to lose?] Why is that light always there?
Mandela: Let’s walk to it and see.
Nazira: [Mandela walked with Young Man, I strolled behind. They talked together, but I did not hear. As they approached, the light got brighter.]
Mandela: Go ahead. Walk into the light.
Nazira: [Archangel Gabriel approached.]
Gabriel: Young man, there is someone on the other side who loves you, and wants you to come.
Nazira: [Young Man looked at Archangel Gabriel in great surprise.]
Young Man: You are a real Angel. Where am I?
Gabriel: You have left your body on Earth. You are in another place.
Young Man: Where?
Gabriel: Your mother is waiting for you on the other side.
Young Man: I do not know my mother. She died when I was a baby.
Gabriel: You are not on Earth. You are where she is.
Young Man: Could I see her face?
Gabriel: Go into the Light and see for yourself.
Young Man: [Walked quickly into the Light.]
Nazira: [Mandela, Gabriel and I heard a loud, joyful cry, “My son, my son, my son!”]
Nazira: [We smiled at each other, and slowly left the Valley of Sorrows.]
Nazira: [When I finished the last words of the message, I found my eyes filled with tears. I ran for a Kleenex.]
This series is
copyright, with permission to share complete messages,
We are asking for African volunteer translators wishing to join us in this big ‘joint-venture’ with Tata Madiba.
Comments
“We would like to say a few words on the subject of a being who just left this world and who on Earth you called Nelson Mandela.
His mission is obviously over and he has gone directly towards the Light.
He had, as some other beings also, volunteered to come to the planet Earth to accomplish his mission. This being terminated, he has not gone into what you call the astral plane; though he could have stayed there, but he went to the most elevated planes. What is going to seem strange to you is that he has returned to the spaceships to work again for humanity.
You are sending much Love to this man! We would like to tell you that he is already sending much Love to the Earth!
It took him very little time to return ‘to his home” to continue his work. It must be said that he had the necessary preparation over several years; he left his body with the knowledge of doing so in order to work on the spaceships where he is right now.
It may also seem strange to you that a being who leaves his body can go so rapidly to another place. This being was not attached to the world on Earth, even though he loved all human beings deeply with a true Love.
Now, just be aware that from where he is he sends you much Love and Light, and in a certain way, as with many other beings, he is watching over you.
This being has always known how to orient his life and the life of others towards peace, towards fraternity, and towards harmony. He did everything he could so that violence between men would not erupt.
This is what we wanted to tell you on the subject of this remarkable man.”
A military wing was formed in 1961, called Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), meaning "Spear of the Nation", with Mandela as its first leader. MK operations during the 1960s primarily involved targeting and sabotaging government facilities. Mandela was arrested in 1962, convicted of sabotage in 1964 and sentenced to life imprisonment on Robben Island, along with Sisulu and other ANC leaders after the Rivonia Trial.
During the 1970s and 1980s the ANC leadership in exile under Oliver Tambo made the decision to target Apartheid government leadership, command and control, secret police, and military-industrial complex assets and personnel in decapitation strikes, targeted killings, and guerilla actions such as bomb explosions in facilities frequented by military and government personnel. A number of civilians were also killed in these attacks. Examples of these include the Amanzimtoti bombing,[5] the Sterland bomb in Pretoria,[6] the Wimpy bomb in Pretoria,[7] the Juicy Lucy bomb in Pretoria[6] and the Magoo's bar bombing in Durban.[8] ANC acts of sabotage aimed at government institutions included the bombing of the Johannesburg Magistrates Court, the attack on the Koeberg nuclear power station, the rocket attack on Voortrekkerhoogte in Pretoria, and the 1983 Church Street bombing in Pretoria, which killed 16 and wounded 130.