Download With hymns and eulogies, South Africans of all colors and creeds remembered Nelson Mandela in a day of prayer on Sunday, holding him up as an example to build a better nation and world. At churches, mosques, synagogues and community halls across the country, from the Limpopo River to the Cape, millions offered praise and reflected on a man celebrated as "Father of the Nation" and as a global beacon of integrity, rectitude and reconciliation. Mandela, South Africa's first black president, who steered his nation out of apartheid and into multiracial democracy, died late on Thursday at the age of 95 after months of illness. Since then, Africa's economic powerhouse has been gripped by an outpouring of emotion unrivaled since Mandela's release from 27 years of prison in 1990. The eyes of the world have been fixed on his Johannesburg home where crowds have piled flowers, balloons and messages. At the famous Regina Mundi Church that was near the epicenter of the Soweto uprising in 1976 against white rule, Father Sebastian J. Rossouw described Mandela as "moonlight", saying he offered a guiding light for South Africa. Hundreds of people attended Mass in the small church that stil1 bears the scars of the conflict. "Madiba did not doubt the light," Rossouw said, using Mandela's clan name. "He paved the way for a better future, but he cannot do it alone." The day of prayers kicks off an official program of mourning that includes a memorial service in a Johannesburg stadium on Tuesday and a state funeral on Sunday at Mandela's Eastern Cape ancestral home of Qunu - expected to be one of the biggest gatherings of world leaders in recent history. |