Christo Brand was a South African farm boy, assigned as prison warder to a
notorious black terrorist, Nelson Mandela. The two of them, a boy of 18 and a
long-suffering freedom fighter aged 60, could well have become bitter enemies.
Instead they formed an extraordinary life-long friendship. Told by Christo
himself, this is their incredible story.
Christo Brand was a South African farm boy, born into the Afrikaans culture which had created apartheid to persecute black people and claim superiority for whites. Nelson Mandela, also raised in a rural village, was the black son of a tribal chief. He trained as a lawyer to take up the fight against apartheid on behalf of a whole nation. Their opposing worlds collided when Christo, a raw recruit from the country's prison service, was sent to Robben Island to guard the notoriously dangerous terrorists there. Mandela was their undisputed leader. The two of them, a boy of 18 and a long-suffering freedom fighter then aged 60, could well have become bitter enemies. Instead, they formed an extraordinary friendship through small human kindnesses.