Most of us who have always had the right to vote have no special feelings about it. Not Archbishop Desmond Tutu, when in 1994 he and millions of black South Africans gained suffrage:
The moment for which I had waited so long came and I folded my ballot paper and cast my vote. Wow! I shouted, “Yippee!” It was giddy stuff. It was like falling in love. The sky looked blue and more beautiful. I saw people in a new light. They were beautiful, they were transfigured. I too was transfigured. It was dreamlike. You were scared someone would rouse you and you would awake to the nightmare that was apartheid’s harsh reality.
(Quoted from page 6 of Exploring Happiness: From Aristotle to Brain Science, by Sissela Bok. Yale University Press, 2010)
For a brief biography of Desmond Tutu, click here. For images of or relating to Desmond Tutu, click here.
For a brief biography of Sissela Bok, click here. For images of or relating to Sissela Bok, click here.
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