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Friday, January 9, 1998 at 14:08:32
I want to express regret for not being more active in the struggle to end gross human
rights violations is SA.
I was rather young, but that is no excuse.
I would also call on all my brothers and sisters in South Africa to work together to
overcome the forces that hold people apart.
Oliver Barnett, Cape Town, SA
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Saturday, January 10, 1998 at 15:40:36
The movement toward reconciliation is commendable... even though it may not totally
succeed.
As a reporter who had to carry two passports just in case I had to land in South Africa
(and therefore would not be terribly welcome elsewhere in Africa where my assignments
were), I have had concerns through the years. Present and future government balance may
depend on how well reconciliation actually happens. I hope for the very best with all my
heart.
Jo Campbell, Ocean City, Maryland, USA
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Sunday, January 11, 1998 at 23:01:43
All gratitude to those who have brought about this new freedom and opened wonderful
possibilities for our troubled country to take a respected place in the world family of
nations.
With the birth of the New South Africa I felt a lightness and joy in my heart that I
hadn't imagined possible.The feeling has matured with the passing of the first euphoria
and has opened new gateway s of personal growth and fulfilment. My wish is that it be the
same for all South Africans.
I fervently desire that all those who suffered the most terrible wrongs of apartheid
can find healing and peace within themselves and can forgive the wrong doers. Anger and
hatred have been found to be the most toxic and damaging emotions to one's own body
whether the anger is directed at one's self or someone else.
Thank you to my teacher, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who showed me, through Transcendental
Meditation, how to find the peace and love in my heart during those dark and terrible
years and gave me the bless ing of being able to pass it on to others. JAI GURU DEV
Kerry Helen Niddrie-Grotz, Sandton, SA
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Saturday, January 31, 1998 at 18:17:26
Dear Sisters and Brothers,
We, the congregation of the Old-Episcopalean Catholic Church in the Netherlands, we are
following the efforts of the commission of Truth and Reconcilliation. We have deep respect
for your work, we remember you in our prayers.
I will specially greet mu collegue and brother Bishop Tutu, who is suffering of cancer
(we've heard). Myself I suffer of MS, and since several months, I mostly laying in my bed.
May the Lord bless you and your work.
Bishop Hieronymus Greveling, The Netherlands
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Sunday, February 1, 1998 at 04:51:42
My human rights pilgrimage began in my hometown of Memphis, TN, where Martin Luther
King, Jr. was murdered. The degree of possible government complicity in his death may
never be known. Something like South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission may be
our nation's only hope of ever knowing the truth about his death and many others', both
African American and diverse others, who like myself, is a white (sometimes called
"white-Niggers" for supporting human rights in the USA). When news of King's
death spread across Memphis my father, an insurance agent, was inside the home of an
African American. A knock came on the door by a Black man who recognized my father's car.
He said, "Mr. Reed, you better get out of here quick. They killed Martin Luther King
and the Blacks all up and down here are going wild, throwing bricks at the cars of any
white person they see." My father got home safely, I believe, because he respected
the dignity of all persons. The man who warned my father knew that and returned the
respect at a time when it may have saved my father's life. For over 26 years now I have
been teaching in the relatively new discipline of "criminal justice." For the
first time this semester I am teach our course titled, "Race, Gender, and
Corrections." Because I believe that our government probably has abused Native
Americans even more than African Americans (see (Law & Legal Issues, Confederated
Native Court Decision, Feb 2, 1997), the first book our class is reading is Dee Brown's
classic, "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American
West." I found your web site because I was searching for information about South
Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission that I could share with students in this
class. Clearly, the traditional, narrow understanding of "corrections" does not
address the crimes that have been committed agaist Native Americans (or African
Americans). What primarily needs to be "corrected" is not "individual"
"bad" Indians, but decades of injustice, crimes, and coverup by our own
government. Anyone familiar with the case of Leonard Peltier, a Native American, knows the
tragic and brutal continuation of our government's injustice and lack of respect for basic
human rights . For Native and African Americans, as well as whites, I believe that the
bold human rights experiment of South Africa's Truth and Reconcilation Commission offers
the only valid hope for real peace, law, and order in the USA. Thomas E. Reed, Richmond,
Ky.
Thomas E. Reed, Richmond, Ky., USA
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Sunday, February 1, 1998 at 19:06:06
I regret that despite clearly understanding the evil of the imposition of Apartheid
since my early youth, I did nothing other than offer sterile, conventional, meaningless
opposition to the regime.
I must now plan an active programme of compensation within my limited resources.
Patrick McHarry, South Africa
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Sunday, February 1, 1998 at 19:14:56
I, STANFORD JOHN ISAACS, ADMIT:
that I failed to do more to to bring about the present transformation in our country.
Stanford John Isaacs, Cape Town, SA
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Sunday, February 1, 1998 at 19:23:09
I express my sincere regret for failures in the past to do all I could have done to
prevent gross violations of human rights, and I commit myself to a new future in which
such violations will not take place.
Johanna Rykheer, Pretoria, SA
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Sunday, February 1, 1998 at 19:36:54
Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika
Although we came from diverse backgrounds (English vs. Afrikaans, Catholic vs. Dutch
Reformed, city vs. farm), both of us became aware of the evil of apartheid at very young
ages. Neither of us however, did anything significant to improve the situation. Our
biggest regret is not having been more interested, better informed, louder voices and more
active in the struggle against apartheid.
We have committed ourselves to actively dispell the negativity which we find prevalent
amongst our peers. As two 31 year old professionals we believe that South Africa holds a
bright future!
May God's favour rest on our beautiful country.
Gerard & Tiana van Harmelen, Arcadia, Pretoria, SA
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Sunday, February 1, 1998 at 20:47:19
I wish to confess my apathy for not standing up against Apartheid when it truly
mattered and in fact being in the system ie the Navy. I tell my children of the evil of
Apartheid as they sit on my knee. Thank you for all the work that you do. May God bless
you.
Derrick Peel, Hout Bay, SA
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