US First Lady Michelle Obama called on Nelson Mandela at his home, in a rare visit with the ageing rights icon whose legacy in the fight against apartheid frames her tour of South Africa.
This photo, provided by the Nelson Mandela Foundationm shows former South African President Nelson Mandela (R) showing a book to US First Lady Michelle Obama at his home in Johannesburg. Obama called on Nelson Mandela at his home Tuesday, in a rare visit with the ageing rights icon whose legacy in the fight against apartheid frames her tour of South Africa.
The meeting with the 92-year-old South African Nobel Peace Prize winner was discreetly arranged after Obama and her daughters visited archives chronicling some of his 27 years as a political prisoner.At the Mandela Foundation, his wife Graca Machel guided Obama, her mother, and her daughters Malia and Sasha walked through an exhibit of his personal photographs and journals, in which he meticulously drafted letters but also kept more mundane notes on his weight and daily routine.
"After leaving here, she proceeded to make a brief courtesy call on former president Mandela," said Achmat Dangor, the head of the foundation, calling the first lady "a lovely woman without any airs".
Their visit added to the symbolism surrounding Obama's journey, with the first black family in the White House meeting South Africa's first black president.
President Barack Obama has called the anti-apartheid struggle his first political cause, and US officials say he has had periodic telephone contact with Mandela, who led the struggle against white-minority rule.
The two men met in 2005 when then senator Obama toured Africa. A simple mobile phone picture of that meeting is now in Mandela's office, aides to the Michelle Obama said.
Mandela welcomed her entire family into his home, including a niece and nephew travelling with them.
Such visits are increasingly rare.
Mandela, who turns 93 next month, has received few guests since he was hospitalised with an acute respiratory infection in January.
After leaving his home in the leafy Houghton neighbourhood, they travelled to a Johannesburg day care centre where they brought about 200 books and read "The Cat in the Hat" to 25 children.
"So we brought a gift. We brought you lots of books, some of my favourite books, some of the president's favourite books, some of Malia and Sasha's favorite books.
But Mandela's legacy in the battle for South African democracy defined much of Obama's visit.
Her next stop was to the Apartheid Museum, which chronicles the rise and fall of white rule, where she along with her family took a tour led by its director and chairman. The tour lasted about 90 minutes.
She also took a photo with 75 young women who are participating in a forum with her Wednesday.
She was set on Wednesday to visit the memorial for Hector Pieterson -- a 12-year-old boy killed during the anti-apartheid Soweto uprising in 1976.
On Thursday she planned to see Mandela's former prison at Robben Island and meet Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu in Cape Town, before heading to neighbouring Botswana for a safari on Saturday.
On Wednesday Obama will also give the keynote address at a conference of the Young African Women Leaders Forum, a two-day meeting of young women who are playing leadership roles across the continent.
Earlier Tuesday, Obama met briefly with one of President Jacob Zuma's three wives, Nompumelelo Ntuli-Zuma, and a group of some 100 invitees in Pretoria.
"Michelle Obama certainly convinced the dignitaries she is excited to be here, and said her husband is 'pouty' that he isn't," Nic Dawes, editor of the weekly Mail & Guardian, tweeted after meeting her.
US officials are describing the trip as her first major solo overseas trip as first lady.
The visit is her second official trip to sub-Saharan Africa, after a 24-hour stop in Ghana with her husband in 2009.
Obama made her first solo trip as first lady last year, stopping briefly in Haiti before continuing on to Mexico for a three-day visit.
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