Winne Mandala movie review



  
Powerful story of Winnie Mandala finally comes to the movies
            There is a saying among great men and it is “Behind every great man is an even greater woman.”  These women allow their husbands to achieve their goals. One such great woman is Winnie Mandela. Her story of love, power, struggle, personal and political triumphs, and suffering has been for too long ignored and forgotten, but that has all changed with this movie.
            Winnie Mandela, which is the movie’s title, tells the story of a young woman who was the sixth girl (out of how many siblings?) in her family. She received the spiritual name of Nomzamo Winfreda Zanyiwe Madikizela from her father. Despite the state’s refusal to educate blacks in South Africa, she was able to earn a degree in social work from Jan Hofmeyer School in Johannesburg. She also earned an international relations degree at the University of Witwatersrand. Eventually she became the first black social worker during apartheid-era South Africa. Even with all of these achievements under her belt, the greatest was yet to come. The year of 1957 would change Winnie’s life forever! For it was the year that she met a sharp lawyer and activist named Nelson Mandela.
            This is the part of her life that really is forgotten, but is depicted very well in the movie. Before Winn and Nelson were married and fighting for a free South Africa, they were just two ordinary young people who were in love and wanted to start a family. However, all of that change when Nelson and his friends decided to take on the apartheid government of South Africa! Police harassment started at their wedding with police officers following their wedding ceremony from beginning to end. Once the Mandela’s returned home, they ransacked their house.  This treatment of harassment continued with the Mandela’s until Nelson was release from prison some 27 years later!
Her autobiographical movie clearly shows the audience how her strength , her belief in a free South Africa, allowed her to become the power of the people, her love for Nelson Mandela uplifted him while he remained in prison, her fierceness kept their dream for a free South Africa alive, and her refusal to accept defeat freed a nation! These elements are why the apartheid government of South Africa crumbled all those years ago! 
            This is one of the most powerful and inspirational movies that I have seen in a long time. I heartily recommend every black woman to see with their girlfriends, mothers, and daughters. So they can see, learn, become inspired and feel the struggle of what it took for South Africa to be truly free. This is something that all Africans and African-Americans can relate to our struggle in the United States of getting equal rights during the Civil Rights Movement. Even to this day we are still fighting the good fight in getting social justice, affordable housing, equal jobs opportunities, and education in today’s world. 
In essences, Winnie’s autobiographical movie shows how much the fight is still continuing to this day, but also how the fight for social justices and equal rights on two different contents were fought by both great men and great women!    

Reporter by Nadia Johnson
December 12, 2013

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