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com
Name: Rolihlahla Nelson Mandela
Details: South African leader, Revolutionary and Statesman
Date: 1918 -
Thesis: Rolihlahla Nelson Mandela, South African leader, revolutionary
and statesman is heralded as the first democratically elected President
of South Africa. After twenty seven years of incarceration for his non-
violent struggle against South African apartheid, he was the catalyst
that helped bring about a peaceful transition to a fully-representative
democracy in South Africa.
Outline:
I. Early Life: At an early age, young Rolihlahla Mandela was
groomed as the Paramount Chief’s ward to assume high office.
II. Education: He attended the University College of Fort Hare
and Witwatersrand where he was elected onto the Student's
Representative Council and qualified in law in 1942.
III. Early Work: Mandela entered politics in earnest while studying
in Johannesburg by joining the African National Congress in
1942.
IV. Influences: Along with Oliver R. Tambo, who died in 1993 as
National Chairman of the ANC, Mandela opened the first black
legal firm in the South Africa.
V. Obstacles: For his struggle against apartheid, Mandela
endured a long and hard incarceration, which lasted a total of
27 years.
VI. Later Work: Mandela launched a campaign in November 2002,
using his prison number 46664 to help raise funds for his
foundation’s fight against HIV/AIDS in South Africa.
VII. Legacy: His life has inspired the oppressed and deprived;
those opposed to oppression and deprivation and truly
symbolizes the triumph of the human spirit over man’s
inhumanity to man.
Rolihlahla Nelson Mandela, South African leader, revolutionary
and statesman is heralded as the first democratically elected President
of South Africa. After twenty seven years of incarceration for his non-
violent struggle against South African apartheid, he was the catalyst
that helped bring about a peaceful transition to a fully-representative
democracy in South Africa.
Rolihlahla Mandela, whose first name means ‘troublemaker,’ was
born to Chief Henry Mphakanyiswa of the royal house of Thembu. Chief
Mphakanyiswa was the principal councilor to the Acting Paramount
Chief of Thembu. After his father’s death, young Rolihlahla became the
Paramount Chief’s ward to be groomed for high office. He enjoyed the
benefits of royalty and was influenced by the cases at the Chief’s
court. At this point in his life, according to the African National
Congress Website, ANC Today, he “determined to become a lawyer […
and] dreamed also of making his own contribution to the freedom
struggle of his people.” While in the Chief’s court, he was privy to the
traditions and discussions of the elders. This insight developed in
Mandela a keen admiration and knowledge of the combating spirit of
his people to rid themselves of the shackles of oppression. It appeared
that an indelible impression had been made on his young mind to
uphold the legacy of his forbears.
Though no one in his family had received formal education,
Rolihlahla Mandela attended primary school at a local mission where
he was taught British traditions, Christian doctrine and received the
English name by which he would be known. In Mandela: The Authorized
Portrait, Clinton and Tutu question the overbearing influence of the
British in the educational scheme: “He was given the name Nelson by
his teacher […quite arbitrarily] although at the time mission educated
children were often named after British imperial heroes. That an
English name was necessary at all had as much to do with the English
bias in the educational system” (13). At nineteen, Mandela proceeded
to Healdtown – a Wesleyan secondary school of some repute where the
English bias was further reinforced. Martin Meredith describes
Mandela’s opinion of the nature of tutoring at Healdtown, “We were
taught and believed that the best ideas were English ideas, the best
government was English government and the best men were
Englishmen” (18). He went on to the University College of Fort Hare
where he met Oliver Tambo, a comrade with whom he would later set-
up the first black legal practice in South Africa. He also attended the
University of Witwatersrand where he was elected onto the Student's
Representative Council and qualified in law in 1942. On Time
magazine’s website, Brink Andre writes in the article Leaders and
Revolutionaries: Nelson Mandela, “It was only after he left the
missionary College of Fort Hare, where he had become involved in
student protests against the white colonial rule of the institution, that
he set out on the long walk toward personal and national liberation.”
From this point, Mandela seemed destined for difficulties in the pursuit
of his childhood dreams of liberation for his people.
He became active in politics while studying in Johannesburg
where he joined the African National Congress (ANC) in 1942. In 1944,
Mandela and other young members of the ANC established the African
National Congress Youth League. The members, led by Anton Lembede,
included William Nkomo, Walter Sisulu, Oliver R. Tambo, and Ashby P.
Mda. In 1947, Mandela was elected Secretary of the League. After the
incumbent National Party won the 1948 all-White elections on the
platform of Apartheid, the Programme of Action, inspired by the ANCYL,
which advocated the weapons of boycott, strike, civil disobedience and
non-co-operation was accepted as official ANC policy. Mandela made
reference to his philosophy of confrontation without resort to violence
in his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom: The Autobiography of
Nelson Mandela, “Like the people of the East, Africans have a highly
developed sense of dignity, or what the Chinese call "face" […] I
learned that to humiliate another person is to make him suffer an
unnecessarily cruel fate. Even as a boy, I defeated my opponents
without dishonoring them” (10). In 1950, in appreciation of this radical
style of leadership, Mandela was again elected to the National
Executive Committee of the ANCYL at the national conference.
Likewise, when the ANC launched its Campaign for the Defiance
of Unjust Laws in 1952, Mandela was voted National Volunteer-in-Chief.
In addition, Mandela’s outstanding contribution during the Defiance
Campaign was noted and he was elected deputy president of the ANC
itself. During the early fifties, he played an important part in leading
the resistance to the Western Areas removals and to the introduction of
Bantu Education. He also played a significant role in popularizing the
Freedom Charter, adopted by the Congress of the People in 1955. In a
botched trial, which took place after Mandela was arrested on trumped
up treason charges in 1956, the government accused him and his
comrades of communist intentions and plotting a coup d'etat. In
Mandela: An Illustrated Autobiography, Mandela declared, “The verdict
was an embarrassment to the government, both at home and abroad.
Yet the lesson they took away was not that we had legitimate
grievances but that they needed to be far more ruthless” (84). After
the trial, Mandela anticipated the government’s next move. According
to Ken Oliobi, in his article Mandela on the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation Website, “In 1961, Mandela went underground […]. He
helped organize the military wing of the ANC, Umkonto we Sizwe (the
Spear of the Nation), later simply abbreviated to MK. In 1962, Mandela
left the country to receive military training in Algeria and to arrange
training for other members of the MK.” Mandela realized that the
trouble ahead must be successfully negotiated and survived and
decided to prepare himself and his comrades for what seemed
imminent.
As he had anticipated, because of his unrelenting defiance and
constant struggle against sanctions and the oppression of the
apartheid government, Mandela was doomed to spend the next
twenty-seven years of his life in incarceration. Reggie Finlayson in
Nelson Mandela: Biography writes in reference to Mandela’s eventual
release from prison, “He […came] out unbowed and prepared to
continue the struggle. At a point in life when most men retire, Nelson
Mandela took the helm of a new nation. He had traveled a long way –
and crossed many famous rivers” (9). The apartheid government, by
subjecting Mandela to this long and hard prison sentence sought to
break his fighting spirit and diminish his popularity. Ironically, Nelson
Mandela emerged from prison stronger in spirit, more popular and
determined to fulfill his mission. Days before his well publicized release
from prison, the new state president, F.W. de Klerk announced the
lifting of various oppressive sanctions. The ban on the ANC was also
lifted and numerous political prisoners where freed. This landmark
move paved way for the beginning of emancipation in South Africa.
Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the first democratically
elected President of South Africa in May 1994. In November 2002,
Mandela launched a campaign using his prison number – 46664 – to
help raise funds for his foundation set-up to help fight against HIV/AIDS
in South Africa. His commitment to his life’s work of equality and
freedom for his countrymen black and white and all people of the world
at large earned him the Nobel Peace Prize.
Now a year short of his 90th birthday, Nelson Mandela has never
wavered in his devotion to democracy and dignity for all people black
or white. Despite terrible provocation, he has never answered violence
with violence. On the website of Time magazine, Gordon Brown writes,
“[Mandela] tells us that man's goodness is a flame that can be hidden
but never extinguished. With Mandela, and because of Mandela, no
noble cause is unachievable.” Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela is an icon
whose sacrifice and perseverance has undoubtedly brought about
freedom and true democracy, not only for the peoples of South Africa,
but also for citizens worldwide.
Works Cited
1. Brink, Andre. “Leaders and Revolutionaries: Nelson Mandela”
TIME - The
TIME 100: The Most Important People Of The Century. 13
April 1998. 28 November 2006.
<http://www.time.com/time/time100/leaders/profile/mande
la.html
2. Brown, Gordon. “Rebels and Leaders: Nelson Mandela” TIME – 60
years
of Heroes 13 November 2006; Vol.168, No. 21. 28
November 2006
<http://www.time.com/time/europe/hero2006/mandela.htm
l>
3. Clinton, Bill and Tutu, Desmond. Mandela: The Authorized
Portrait.
Missouri: Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2006
4. Finlayson, Reggie. Nelson Mandela: Biography. Minnesota: Lerner
Publications Company, 1999.
5. Mandela, Nelson. Long Walk to Freedom: The Autobiography of
Nelson Mandela. Boston: Back Bay Books, 1995.
6. Mandela, Nelson. Mandela: An Illustrated Autobiography. Boston:
Little,
Brown, 1996.
7. Meredith, Martin. Nelson Mandela: A Biography. New York: St.
Martin’s
Press, 1997.
8 Oliobi, Ken. “Nelson Mandela.” Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.
December 2006. 28 November 2006.
<http://www.wagingpeace.org/menu/programs/youth-
outreach/
peace-heroes/mandela-nelson.htm>
9. “Profile of Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela: Biographical Details.” ANC
TODAY-
Online Voice of the African National Congress Vol. 6, No. 46.
24-30 November 2006. 28 November 2006.
<http://www.anc.org.za/people/mandela.html>
© Tayo Banjo | Fall, 2006 | media5live.com
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