PERTH, WA: February 15, 1990
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Just a closer walk with thee "Just a closer walk with thee . . ." is perhaps what Storyville jazz band leader Dixie Kidd hummed as he helped Father Joe Russell from the St Mary's Cathedral sanctuary after the priest jazz aficionado had given his opening blessing to a rare gospel song evening last Friday night.
• More pictures and words on Page 7
e to peace
PRETORIA, South Africa (CNS): Southern Africa's bishops said that the release February 11 of South African anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela was a key to racial peace in South Africa.
They also said they hoped Mandela's freedom. after 27 years in prison, will end a "particularly sad chapter" in the country's history. The bishops have "long held that Mr Mandela's
** Killer: Howl felt whenI was doomed to die • Page 12 **
release is vital for a negotiated and peaceful political settlement", the African southern bishops' conference said in a statement released on February 12, the day after the 71-year-old leader walked into freedom. Although confined to prison for more than a quarter-century, Mandela became the symbol of the black South African struggle against white-minority rule and
the racial system of apartheid. "His release hopefully signals the end to a particularly sad chapter in South African history in which many lost their lives and countless others suffered detention, imprisonment and exile in their struggle for justice," the bishops said. The bishops said they rejoiced that Mandela is free, "able once again to exercise his rights and undertake his responsi-
bilities within his family reunion" and said they assured him of their and society". "Along with many oth- "prayers and support as ers, but in a special way he faces the many and nonetheless because of daunting challenges his leadership role, he expected of him as leader has suffered imprison- and statesman in the ment and vilification in months and years his struggle to work for a ahead". Mandela, sentenced to South Africa in which each and every person life imprisonment for would be respected and treason in 1964, soon valued, regardless of his after his release challenged the South African skin," the bishops said. The bishops wished government by backing Mandela and his family guerrilla war against the "a joyous and lasting apartheid system.
S African bishops on Mandela's release
"We have no option," he He also demanded said in a speech to 50.000 negotiations to end white supporters in Cape power and give a political Town. He urged the voice to the voteless black world to maintain puni- majority. tive economic sanctions Mandela headed for his against the white- single-storey house in minority led Pretoria Soweto, the black towngovernment. ship of more than two outside Mandela quoted from a million statement he made at the Johannesburg. end of the 1964 trial: Crowds in Soweto on "Our resort to the armed February 12 sang a new struggle in 1960 . . . was freedom song with the a purely defensive action chorus, "Mandela is against the violence of coming, Mandela is apartheid." coming".
Double billing It was a double billing at the Piccadilly Theatre's opening of the film Romero on Tuesday night when half of the audience became parish representatives receiving their Project Compassion materials from Archbishop Foley as he launched the Lenten appeal. • See pages 2 and 3