The man accused of providing “fake” sign language during Nelson Mandela’s memorial service said he “started hearing voices” and was hallucinating on stage.
Organizers are investigating how 34-year-old Thamsanqa Jantjie was allowed within feet of prominent world leaders speaking at the anti-apartheid icon’s memorial where he was accused of gesticulating wildly in a manner denounced by deaf organizations.
Jantjie told NBC News Thursday he is currently receiving mental health treatment for schizophrenia and that he had hallucinated visions of angels during the memorial.
“While I was working, which is not a part of an excuse… I had a breakdown,” Jantjie said in an interview with BBC. “When I see angels come from sky to the crowd and I start knowing that I’m not well because it’s not something possible. But believe me, I saw them coming on stage. From that moment, it was not myself and from that time you must ask yourself of your safety and your security and safety of other people that are around you.”
Jantjie said he worked as a senior interpreter for a company called SA Interpreters, hired by the African National Congress party. South Africa’s leading deaf association, the Deaf Federation of South Africa, told NBC News no one the group is aware of has ever heard of it, and it cannot find the company anywhere online.
The South African government admitted the man was not a professional interpreter and the ANC said it was the government, not the party, who hired the interpreter.
“There was nothing I could do,” the man told Johannesburg’s Star newspaper. “I was alone in a very dangerous situation. I tried to control myself and not show the world what was going on. I am very sorry. It’s the situation I found myself in.”
Jantjie “was moving his hands around but there was no meaning in what he used his hands for,” said Bruno Druchen, the national director for the Deaf Federation of South Africa, according to the Associated Press.
Additional sign language experts—including Druchen’s wife, Wilma Newhoudt-Druchen, a member of the South African Parliament who is deaf— said that the man was signing meaninglessly.
@NkenkeKekana @GautengANC the so called interpreter on the stage with Cde Cyril is not signing. He's just making up. Get him out of TV sight
— wilma newhoudt (@newhoudt) December 11, 2013
“It was horrible, an absolute circus, really, really bad,” Nicole Du Toit, an official sign language interpreter told the AP. “Only he can understand those gestures.”









