86:"Often, Winnie's visits were overseen by Warrant Officer James Gregory, who had been a censor on Robben Island. I had not known him terribly well, but he knew us, because he had been responsible for reviewing our incoming and outgoing mail. At Pollsmoor I got to know Gregory better and found him a welcome contrast to the typical warder. He was polished and soft-spoken, and treated Winnie with courtesy and deference". Instead of barking, 'Time up!' he would say, 'Mrs Mandela, you have five more minutes.'
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Sampson said that
Mandela considered suing Gregory, but refrained from doing so when the Prison Department distanced itself from Gregory's book. Sampson also said that other warders had told him in interviews that they suspected Gregory of spying for the government.
132:, was a fabrication, and in reality Gregory rarely spoke to Mandela. Gregory censored the letters sent to the future president, uncovering details of Mandela's personal life, and later sold this information in Goodbye Bafana.
126:. Sampson's biography said that Gregory was pretending to be Mandela's friend in prison, so that he could make money. According to Sampson, the close relationship depicted in Gregory's book,
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was based. The book, and later the film, are based on the idea that
Gregory and Mandela had developed a friendship despite being prison guard and prisoner, respectively.
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He was one of the most refined warders. Well-informed and courteous with everybody. Soft spoken. Very good observations. I developed a lot of respect for him.
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Mandela later invited
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The second occasion that
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98:, we had never discussed politics, but our bond was an unspoken one and I would miss his soothing presence".
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Nelson
Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom, Little, Brown & Company, 1994, pages 449 and 490
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contains an interview with Nelson
Mandela where he speaks of James Gregory as follows:
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I was Nelson's Friend, And Jailer: James
Gregory tells his story to Benjamin Pogrund
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Gregory's claims were disputed by one of
Mandela's biographers,
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for many years of his captivity. He later wrote the book
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South
African prison guard of Nelson Mandela and writer
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Goodbye Bafana: Nelson
Mandela, My Prisoner, My Friend
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147:who had tried to get him executed in the
32:For other people with the same name, see
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218:The Independent, 11 February 1994:
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203:Mandela: The Authorised Biography
42:(7 November 1941 – 2003) was the
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229:The story of Mandela's warders
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280:South African prison officers
191:Goodbye Bafana: The Making Of
275:People from the Western Cape
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265:White South African people
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143:, and the prosecutor Dr.
68:Mandela's view of Gregory
58:, on which the 2007 film
238:Nelson Mandela's Warders
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72:In his autobiography,
18:James Gregory (writer)
270:South African writers
241:Retrieved 2012-07-10
232:Retrieved 2012-07-10
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260:2003 deaths
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141:P.W. Botha
118:Criticism
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155:See also
44:censor
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20:)
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