Nelson Mandela leaves $4.1 million estate to family, staff and ANC
February 3, 2014 -- Updated 1454 GMT (2254 HKT)
![[File] Nelson Mandela and his wife Graca Michel at President Jacob Zuma's inauguration ceremony on May 09, 2009.](http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/140203104753-mandela-will-5-story-top.jpg)
[File] Nelson Mandela and his wife Graca Michel at President Jacob Zuma's inauguration ceremony on May 09, 2009.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Nelson Mandela's will is read out in Johannesburg on Monday
- His estate is split among family, former staff, schools and the African National Congress
- Mandela's third wife may waive her claims to the estate
- The revered statesman died in December at age 95
At a news conference
where he summarized parts of the revered statesman's will, Deputy
Constitutional Court head Dikgang Moseneke said the estate was
provisionally valued at 46 million rand ($4.1 million), excluding
royalties. It had been read to Mandela family members earlier in the
day.
Moseneke told reporters that Mandela's third wife, Graca Machel, may waive her claims to the estate
A statement about the will was published on the Nelson Mandela Foundation website.



Asked what the mood was
among Mandela family members at the reading of the will, Moseneke said:
"Reading wills are always occasions charged with emotion."
He added that the mood
had been good, with relatives seeking clarifications from time to time,
and virtually the entire family was present, he said, according to the
statement.
Schools, staff remembered
Mandela, who died in
December at the age of 95, left behind an estate that includes a house
in Johannesburg, a dwelling in his rural Eastern Cape home province and
royalties from book sales.
Moseneke said some of the
estate would be split among trusts set up by Mandela, including a
family trust designed to provide for his more than 30 children,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
The home in Houghton, Johannesburg, where Mandela died, will be used by the family of his deceased son Makgatho.
"It is my wish that it
should also serve as a place of gathering of the Mandela family in order
to maintain its unity long after my death," Mandela wrote.
Close personal staff
each get around $4,500, and the schools and educational institutions the
anti-apartheid hero attended are due to receive more than $8,900 each.
Mandela also left equivalent amounts for grants and scholarships at
other schools.
The African National
Congress will also receive some royalties, to be used at the discretion
of the party's executive committee to spread information about the
principles and policies of the party, particularly about reconciliation.
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