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Hillary Rodham Clinton remembered the power and grace of Nelson Mandela, calling the late South African president a "giant among us" as she accepted a human rights award on Friday.
Mandela died Thursday at the age of 95. He had been in failing health for months.
Mandela "demonstrated unequivocally how each of us can choose how we will respond to those injustices and grievances, those sorrows and tragedies that afflict all of human kind," Clinton said on Capitol Hill. "He will certainly be remembered for the way he led, his dignity, his extraordinary understanding — not just of how how to bring democracy and freedom to his beloved South Africa — but of how important it was that he first brought freedom to himself."
Clinton was first lady when Mandela became South Africa's president in 1994. She recalled attending his inauguration and how Mandela made a point of inviting and honoring his jailers.
Clinton's remarks came as she was honored by the Tom Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice, an organization created to carry on the work of the late Democratic congressman. Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor elected to Congress, died of cancer in 2008.
The former secretary of State noted the similarities between Mandela and Lantos. She said they "had seen the worst that humanity can offer" and noted they had been "denied their right to be a Jew in Hungary (and) a black man in South Africa during apartheid.
"They had every reason to come out -- if not embittered — cynical," Clinton said. She added that Mandela and Lantos had "joy, curiosity, enthusiasm for life that they brought with them out of the depth of such suffering."
Clinton and former President Bill Clinton will be among the dignitaries and world leaders attending Mandela's funeral in South Africa next week. The Clintons enjoyed a close relationship with the man known by his clan name of "Madiba," going back to 1992 when they first met.
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