"Being Mandela," a new series premiering Sunday on COZI TV, invites U.S. audiences into the lives of Zaziwe Dlamini-Manaway and Swati Dlamini, the fashionable, 30-something granddaughters of Mandela and Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. The 94-year-old former South African president, who recently was treated for a lung infection and had surgery to remove gallstones, does not appear in the series but his controversial ex-wife - "Big Mommy" to her grandchildren - does and seems to relish it.
Mandela and Grandchildren
If the Mandela clan seems like an odd subject for a reality show, the granddaughters make no apologies.
"We get asked this question a lot. Is this not going to
tarnish the name and is this not going to be bad for the name?" Swati
Dlamini said in an interview with The Associated Press in New York, where she
and her sister were promoting the show. "But our grandparents have always
said to us, this is our name too, and we can do what we think is best fitting
with the name, as long as we treat it with respect and integrity."
The 13-episode first season follows the two women as they try to
carry on the family legacy while juggling motherhood in Johannesburg.
The sisters, who spent most of their childhood in exile in the
United States, make an emotional visit to the prison on Robben Island where
their grandfather spent 18 of the 27 years he was imprisoned by South Africa's
white-ruled government. Swati works on publishing the prison diaries that her grandmother
wrote but now cannot bear to read.
The women, along with two brothers, also become the latest
famous names to launch a fashion line, called "Long Walk to Freedom"
in honor of their grandfather's autobiography. Their lives are special and
glamorous and they know it. They hope that U.S. audiences - COZI TV is a new
network launched by NBC Owned Television Stations - will see a vibrant and
modern side of South Africa through their eyes.
They also bicker. The family, especially Winnie Madikizela-Mandela,
loves to gossip about when Swati, the single mother of a 4-year-old daughter,
is going to get married. Swati is furious when Zaziwe, despite being sworn to
secrecy, blurts to their grandmother that her sister is dating someone. Zaziwe,
35, is married to an American businessman and has three children.
The sisters are the daughters of Zenani Mandela and Prince
Thumbumuzi Dlamini of Swaziland. But parents everywhere will delight in seeing
that being royal doesn't help them face toddler tantrums or get older children
out of bed and into school uniforms.
Big Grandpa and Big Mommy are into the show, the sisters
insisted.
Mandela will definitely watch it, they said. The Nobel Peace
Prize winner apparently sort of likes reality TV.
"You'll be interested to know that he loves Toddlers and
Tiarras," said Swati, laughing in reference to the TLC series about child
beauty pageants.
"Because of the kids! He just loves children," Zaziwe
added quickly.
The sisters said their grandfather is "happy and
healthy."
Zaziwe showed a Feb. 2 photograph of Mandela at home, flashing
his familiar smile, with his youngest great-grandchild on his lap - Zaziwe's
one-year-old son. The picture is a rare public image of Mandela, whose last
appearance on a major stage was during the 2010 World Cup soccer tournament in
South Africa.
Mandela, who always lamented his long separation from his family
during his imprisonment, is happiest these days when his offspring are running
around being loud, his granddaughters said.
"We're in and out of the house. We're loud and he loves the
noise," Zaziwe said.
The granddaughters say their grandfather - to the world, a
symbol of integrity and magnanimity - holds the family to high standards and
sets rules for when the children should be home and when dinner should start.
"He's a very strict person. Most people wouldn't think that
but he really, really is," Zaziwe said.
The sisters are closer to Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, who
divorced Mandela in 1997. Their adoring description of their grandmother as the
doting matriarch stands in contrast with her checkered public image. Beloved by
many poor urban blacks, Madikizela-Mandela also faces accusations that she and
her bodyguard unit committed 18 killings in the 1980s. She denies it.
"She's fun. She never says no to us. I don't think I've
ever heard my grandmother say no to us," Zaziwe said.
Still, the series shows Big Mommy clearly taking charge of the
family. She marches into the hospital room where Zaziwe gave birth to Zen with
a list of possible names for the baby boy.
The sisters say it was only after Mandela retired from public
life that they started to get to know their grandfather.
"Our grandfather always told us that he belongs to the
country and he's of service to the country and he doesn't belong to us as a
family. And that's the sacrifice he's made for the country and that what he's
told us as far as I can remember," Swati said.
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