Nelson Mandela was South Africa's most important leader and one of the greatest statesmen, and served as President from 1994 to 1999. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 for ending racial segregation (Apartheid) in South Africa peacefully, after about 50 years of white supremacy, and for laying the foundations for democracy.
- Nelson Mandela Autobiography Long Walk To Freedom
- Nelson Mandela Memorial
- Nelson Mandela Autobiography Original Document
- Nelson Mandela Autobiography In Afrikaans
- Nelson Mandela Summary Of Life
Nelson Mandela Autobiography Long Walk To Freedom
Nelson Rolihlahla ('troubelmaker' in xhosa language) Mandela was born on 18 July 1918 in Mvezi, a small village in the Transkei region, south-eastern South Africa. His father was Hendry Mphakanyiswa of the Tembu tribe, which speaks the xhosa dialect, a group of the bantu languages. Mandela studied Law at the University of Fort Hare, which expelled him on 1940 for leading a student demonstration, and at the Witwatersrand University.
Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress
In 1944, he contributed to the creation of the African National Congress (ANC), South Africa's most important party aimed at ending injustice towards black people perpetrated by the National Party, the expression of white population, the Afrikaners. The actions against racial segregation started in 1948 and Mandela was arrested for the first time later in 1952. Between 1956 and 1961, Mandela was tried for treason, but cleared.
Nelson mandela biography.docx Page 3 of 4 Nelson Mandela was imprisoned on Robben Island for 18 of his 27 years in prison. As a black political prisoner, he received the lowest level of treatment. However, he was able to earn a Bachelor of Law degree through a University of. Rolihlahla Nelson Mandela was born in Mvezo, a village near Mthatha in the Transkei, on 18 July 1918, to Nongaphi Nosekeni and Gadla Henry Mandela. His father was the key counsellor/adviser to the Thembu royal house. His Xhosa name Rolihlahla literally means 'pulling the branch of a tree'. After his father's death in 1927, the young Rolihlahla. Reproduced by permission of AP/Wide World Photos used to undermine the government) in its fight against apartheid. Political prisoner In 1962 Mandela was again arrested, this time for leaving South Africa illegally and for.
The Sharpeville massacre took place in 1960 (on 21 March, which is now the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination), when 69 people demonstrating against segregationist policies were killed by police forces. In the wake of this tragic event, the government outlawed the ANC. Mandela was considering the need of creating a military wing within the party. In June 1961, the possibility of organising violent actions was proposed during a congress of the ANC, which – despite not sustaining the initiative – established that those who wanted to support Mandela's sabotage actions wouldn't be stopped. So, the Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation, MK) was established.
27 years of imprisonment
Mandela was arrested for the second time in 1962 for leaving the country without being authorised and for organising demonstrations. He was convicted to 5 years in jail and penal servitude. Other members of the MK were arrested the following year and tried for high treason. Mandela, involved in the trial for plotting to overturn the government forcibly, was convicted to life imprisonment on 12 June 1964 and detained in a high security prison in Robber Island, off the coast of Cape Town.
Throughout the 27 years Mandela spent in prison, his fame increased steadily. His silent suffering contributed to raising pressure on South African government and apartheid, making him an international symbol of resistance and a martyr of the fight against racism. Mandela was moved to Pollsmoor high security prison in 1982 and hospitalised in 1988. Back to prison, his detention conditions were made easier though he always refused any political compromises in exchange for freedom. At that time, South Africa was isolated for being racist and Frederik Willem de Klerk, the country's last white president, gave up to international pressure for clemency.
Back to public life
On 11 February 1990, at 72, Nelson Mandela became a free man again. His only aim was ending what he started 40 years before, dedicating himself to black people emancipation. After suspending the party's armed wing, Mandela became president of the ANC in 1991. At that point, a historic meeting with de Klerk led the two leaders to realise that only a compromise between white and black people would prevent a civil war in South Africa. In late 1991, the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) was established with the aim of creating a new government elected by all citizens. Mandela's and de Klerk's efforts convinced the Nobel Committee to award the Nobel Peace Prize to both of them in 1993 'for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime, and for laying the foundations for a new democratic South Africa'.
The end of apartheid and Mandela's presidency
South Africa held its first democratic elections on 27 April 1994. The ANC won with 62 per cent of votes and Mandela became President. De Klerk's Party, which gained 20 per cent of votes, was anyway included in the first national unity government. During his presidency, Mandela worked on peace and to boost the country's economy. He favoured forgiveness to vengeance and demonstrated it by creating the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1995. Even those who committed abuse and violence during the apartheid regime were cleared.
Nelson Mandela quit his political and public life in 1999, leaving to vice president Thabo Mbeki the task of continuing his path. Mandela passed away in Johannesburg on 5 December 2013.
The article was first published in Blog Internazionale in June 2013
Translated by
Nelson Mandela may well be the most admired human being alive. It's difficult to imagine who could compete with him for the title. He went from being prisoner to president and, in the process, became an icon. But he is such a private man that we know very little about what he felt and thought throughout the 92 years of his life. That is, until now.
A book is coming out this week called 'Conversations with Myself.' It's a collection of his notes, letters, diaries, scribblings, most of which he wrote during his 27 years in prison. We literally read what was going on in his mind when he was leading a struggle, when he was preparing to lead a nation. We've known Mandela the man of history. Now we can begin to know Mandela the man.
He's hardly ever seen in public now, and doesn't give interviews. He leaves home only for very special occasions, like a visit to his great granddaughter Zenani's school.
'And where do you come from?' he asked one little girl at the school.
'I come from London,' she replied.
'Oh! London? Have you met the queen there?' Mandela replied, with a chuckle.
Nelson Mandela Memorial
That's the Mandela we've seen so little of - the Mandela who is captured in 'Conversations with Myself.' The book project began with an extraordinary mandate from him: take my personal archives and do what you want with them.
'He's said, 'I don't want you to ask me, Is this too personal, is this too potentially embarrassing,' Verne Harris, the chief archivist at the Mandela Foundation, told '60 Minutes' correspondent Bob Simon.
Link: Nelson Mandela Foundation
The Sharpeville massacre took place in 1960 (on 21 March, which is now the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination), when 69 people demonstrating against segregationist policies were killed by police forces. In the wake of this tragic event, the government outlawed the ANC. Mandela was considering the need of creating a military wing within the party. In June 1961, the possibility of organising violent actions was proposed during a congress of the ANC, which – despite not sustaining the initiative – established that those who wanted to support Mandela's sabotage actions wouldn't be stopped. So, the Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation, MK) was established.
27 years of imprisonment
Mandela was arrested for the second time in 1962 for leaving the country without being authorised and for organising demonstrations. He was convicted to 5 years in jail and penal servitude. Other members of the MK were arrested the following year and tried for high treason. Mandela, involved in the trial for plotting to overturn the government forcibly, was convicted to life imprisonment on 12 June 1964 and detained in a high security prison in Robber Island, off the coast of Cape Town.
Throughout the 27 years Mandela spent in prison, his fame increased steadily. His silent suffering contributed to raising pressure on South African government and apartheid, making him an international symbol of resistance and a martyr of the fight against racism. Mandela was moved to Pollsmoor high security prison in 1982 and hospitalised in 1988. Back to prison, his detention conditions were made easier though he always refused any political compromises in exchange for freedom. At that time, South Africa was isolated for being racist and Frederik Willem de Klerk, the country's last white president, gave up to international pressure for clemency.
Back to public life
On 11 February 1990, at 72, Nelson Mandela became a free man again. His only aim was ending what he started 40 years before, dedicating himself to black people emancipation. After suspending the party's armed wing, Mandela became president of the ANC in 1991. At that point, a historic meeting with de Klerk led the two leaders to realise that only a compromise between white and black people would prevent a civil war in South Africa. In late 1991, the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) was established with the aim of creating a new government elected by all citizens. Mandela's and de Klerk's efforts convinced the Nobel Committee to award the Nobel Peace Prize to both of them in 1993 'for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime, and for laying the foundations for a new democratic South Africa'.
The end of apartheid and Mandela's presidency
South Africa held its first democratic elections on 27 April 1994. The ANC won with 62 per cent of votes and Mandela became President. De Klerk's Party, which gained 20 per cent of votes, was anyway included in the first national unity government. During his presidency, Mandela worked on peace and to boost the country's economy. He favoured forgiveness to vengeance and demonstrated it by creating the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1995. Even those who committed abuse and violence during the apartheid regime were cleared.
Nelson Mandela quit his political and public life in 1999, leaving to vice president Thabo Mbeki the task of continuing his path. Mandela passed away in Johannesburg on 5 December 2013.
The article was first published in Blog Internazionale in June 2013
Translated by
Nelson Mandela may well be the most admired human being alive. It's difficult to imagine who could compete with him for the title. He went from being prisoner to president and, in the process, became an icon. But he is such a private man that we know very little about what he felt and thought throughout the 92 years of his life. That is, until now.
A book is coming out this week called 'Conversations with Myself.' It's a collection of his notes, letters, diaries, scribblings, most of which he wrote during his 27 years in prison. We literally read what was going on in his mind when he was leading a struggle, when he was preparing to lead a nation. We've known Mandela the man of history. Now we can begin to know Mandela the man.
He's hardly ever seen in public now, and doesn't give interviews. He leaves home only for very special occasions, like a visit to his great granddaughter Zenani's school.
'And where do you come from?' he asked one little girl at the school.
'I come from London,' she replied.
'Oh! London? Have you met the queen there?' Mandela replied, with a chuckle.
Nelson Mandela Memorial
That's the Mandela we've seen so little of - the Mandela who is captured in 'Conversations with Myself.' The book project began with an extraordinary mandate from him: take my personal archives and do what you want with them.
'He's said, 'I don't want you to ask me, Is this too personal, is this too potentially embarrassing,' Verne Harris, the chief archivist at the Mandela Foundation, told '60 Minutes' correspondent Bob Simon.
Link: Nelson Mandela Foundation
Extra: Meet Mandela's Wife
Extra: Missing Prison
Extra: Life on Robben Island
Harris spent years going through the mountains of material.
'He wants to see the Mandela as they say, warts and all?' Simon asked.
'He said, 'You don't have to protect me,' Harris replied.
Nelson Mandela Autobiography Original Document
Mandela kept records of everything: in desk calendars, memo pads - every scrap of paper he could lay his hands on.
The most revealing are two notebooks with drafts of letters he wrote from Robben Island, South Africa's Alcatraz, where he was serving a life sentence for sabotage.
Nelson Mandela Autobiography In Afrikaans
Mandela was allowed to send and receive one letter every six months. And the letters reveal that his passion for his wife Winnie never waned.
'What a masterpiece,' he wrote after she sent him a picture of herself. 'The picture has aroused all the tender feelings in me and softened the grimness that is all around. It has sharpened my longing for you and our sweet and peaceful home.'
Winnie had become Mandela's voice on the outside and the Apartheid regime came down on her with a vengeance. She was repeatedly thrown into jail and tortured. The struggle was now not only devastating their lives - their two young daughters had been effectively abandoned.
Nelson Mandela Summary Of Life
Mandela was incredibly blunt about what awaited them. 'My Darlings' he wrote. 'Once again, our beloved Mommy has been arrested and now she and Daddy are away in jail…you may live like orphans without your own home and parents… you will get no birthday or Christmas parties, no presents or new dresses, no shoes or toys.'
'What does it feel like reading it today?' Simon asked Mandela's youngest daughter, Zindzi.
'It takes me back to difficult times,' she replied. 'It's still not easy to talk about those times.'