Front and back cover of "Robben Island Shakespeare" (Courtesy of Folger Shakespeare Library)
Source: Voice of America
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A copy of William Shakespeare's works that is on display in the United
States for the first time has a backstory as compelling as the plays it
contains. This volume tells a chapter of South Africa's history and the
struggles against apartheid, and it gives insight into those who were
imprisoned on Robben Island, including Nelson Mandela.
Shakespeare in Prison
The hardcover copy of "Shakespeare's Complete Works" is known as the
"Robben Island Shakespeare," named for the South African jail that held
political prisoners.
"One of the prisoners, a man named Sonny Venkatrathnam had a book - a
copy of Shakespeare - and asked that he be allowed to keep it in his
cell," explained Michael Witmore, director of the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, where the book is on exhibit.
Venkatrathnam, who was imprisoned at Robben Island in the 1970s, used
brightly colored cards featuring Hindu figures to disguise the book's
real cover. He told his jailers it was a sacred text.
"So he was allowed to keep the book, and when he was in prison, he
passed it to other inmates and asked them to look at the book and
identify passages from Shakespeare that really spoke to them," said
Witmore.
Mandela Connects with Julius Caesar
Among
those prisoners was Nelson Mandela. His signature and the date
December 16, 1977, appear in blue ink alongside a passage from Julius
Caesar.
Cowards die many times before their deaths.
The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,
It seems to me most strange that men should fear,
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come when it will come.
Mandela notably incorporated lines from the passage in his closing
address at the International AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa, in
July 2000. At that time, Mandela said the passage was one he often
repeated, especially when faced with having to say goodbye to someone.
Witmore, a Shakespeare scholar, said readers' connections to Shakespeare
are deeply personal, so he cautioned against trying to divine precisely
why this particular passage appealed to Mandela.
"Those of us who read this play think about that passage as being an
example of stoicism," he said. "It's a philosophy that was around in
the Renaissance, and I think it's something that Mandela connected with,
that is: 'You should not be paralyzed by fear. You should use your
reason and the desire to do things that are important to you and
overcome those fears.'"
Signing Shakespeare
In all, 34 prisoners who held the book selected passages and signed
their names. Venkatrathnam signed the title page. Another chose a line
from The Tempest, "This island's mine, by Sycorax my mother,
Which thou tak'st from me." Others signed beside Puck's lighthearted
final speech in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Witmore said both the physical book and the author's words remained relevant today.
"I think that's what I love about this story," he explained. "It shows
that far away, in a very different place from the one I live in, I can
understand, maybe, what it was like, maybe just a little, for these
people to take this book and say, 'here's something that I want to
remember.'"
Mandela, the artist
Also on exhibit are sketches Mandela began about a decade ago, as he
reflected on Robben Island, his prison of 18 years. Black outlines are
filled in with vivid hues of purple, blue, yellow and green, depicting
the harbor, his jail cell and a church that prisoners were not allowed
to enter.
A placard that accompanies the sketches quotes Mandela as describing
that out of the darkness of the prison "has come a wonderful brightness,
a light so powerful that it could not be hidden behind prison
walls."
The Robben Island exhibit will remain at the Folger Shakespeare Library
through September. Its centerpiece, a once-common 1970 edition of
Shakespeare's works, still belongs to the man who passed it around the
prison, Sonny Venkatrathnam.