A humbling visit to Mandela's cell
The early sun lights the flattop Table Mountain, giving the formation that is this city's signature skyline profile a golden glow. Obama, wearing a wireless microphone pinned to his shirt for one of the two documentary teams taping his African visit, settles into a seat on the ferry to get a briefing from Ahmed Kathrada. He was imprisoned with Mandela, later becoming one of his top advisers after Mandela was elected the first president of the newly democratic South Africa in 1994.
This visit to Robben Island, an important symbolic beginning of an Africa trip, is the first leg for CODEL OBAMA, Washington jargon for an official taxpayer-paid congressional delegation. Often, these "codels" have more than one lawmaker. In this case, the Obama trip to Africa is a codel of one. He is accompanied by his foreign relations staffer, Mark Lippert; Robert Gibbs, his official government and political spokesman, and two Navy officers who help coordinate the visit.
Also part of CODEL OBAMA is Air Force Maj. Gen. Scott Gration, the former director for strategy, policy and plans for the U.S. European Command. EUCOM -- that one is a military acronym -- oversees all U.S. military activity in Europe, most of Africa and parts of the Mideast.
Obama received a benediction from the archbishop in an informal "prayer" session. "Bless him as he serves your people," the archbishop said.
Finding the role of faith in the civic marketplace is a developing theme for Obama.
Last month, Obama got attention for a speech he made chastening Democrats for, in a sense, letting themselves get co-opted by the religious right. He even opened the door to silent voluntary prayer in school.
The church meeting was closed to the press -- we were told the participants wanted it that way. I went off with the other reporters to take a tram ride up Table Mountain in an expedition organized by Gibbs.
Obama's day ended at a private dinner where the senator talked with AIDS activists at the home of U.S. Consul General Helen LaLime, who is posted in Cape Town.
The front page of the Sunday Times, which circulates in South Africa, noted that at the just-concluded AIDS Conference in Toronto, the U.N. special envoy to Africa said the government's theories about the origin and treatment of AIDS were "worthy of a lunatic fringe." The South African government came to Toronto to promote AIDS healing with beet root, garlic, lemons and African potato.
I chatted with Obama when he returned to the hotel. The diners were "deeply disturbed" about their government's views.
"These are very capable people on the ground," Obama told me. He does not mind coming to a host country and criticizing the government when it comes to AIDS.
Said Obama, diplomacy to him "does not mean I don't tell the truth as I see it."
More on AIDS in Africa with CODEL OBAMA today.





