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Nelson
Rolihlahla Mandela was born in a village near Umtata in the
Transkei on the 18 July 1918. His father was the principal
councillor to the Acting Paramount Chief of Thembuland. After
his father s death, the young Rolihlahla became the Paramount
Chief s ward to be groomed to assume high office. However,
influenced by the cases that came before the Chief s court,
he determined to become a lawyer.
At the
height of the Second World War a small group of young Africans,
members of the African National Congress, banded together
under the leadership of Anton Lembede. Among them were William
Nkomo, Walter Sisulu, Oliver R. Tambo, Ashby P. Mda and Nelson
Mandela. Starting out with 60 members, all of whom were residing
around the Witwatersrand, these young people set themselves
the formidable task of transforming the ANC into a mass movement,
deriving its strength and motivation from the unlettered millions
of working people in the towns and countryside, the peasants
in the rural areas and the professionals.
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Inagural
Speech by Nelson Mandela
Our
deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us.
We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented
and fabulous?
You
are a child of God
Your playing small doesn't serve the world.
There's nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other
people won't feel insecure around you.
We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within
us.
It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone.
And
as we let our own light shine,
We unconsciously give other people permission to do the same.
As we are liberated from our own fear,
Our presence automatically liberates others.
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Spurred on by
the victory of the National Party which won the 1948 all-White elections
on the platform of Apartheid, at the 1949 annual conference, the
Programme of Action, inspired by the Youth League, which advocated
the weapons of boycott, strike, civil disobedience and non-co-operation
was accepted as official ANC policy.
When the ANC
launched its Campaign for the Defiance of Unjust Laws in 1952, Mandela
was elected National Volunteer-in-Chief. For his part in the Defiance
Campaign, Mandela was convicted of contravening the Suppression
of Communism Act and given a suspended prison sentence. Shortly
after the campaign ended, he was also prohibited from attending
gatherings and confined to Johannesburg for six months.
During this
period of restrictions, Mandela wrote the attorneys admission examination
and was admitted to the profession. He opened a practice in Johannesburg,
in partnership with Oliver Tambo. In recognition of his outstanding
contribution during the Defiance Campaign Mandela had been elected
to the presidency of both the Youth League and the Transvaal region
of the ANC at the end of 1952, he thus became a deputy president
of the ANC itself. During the early fifties Mandela 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 popularising the Freedom Charter, adopted by the Congress
of the People in 1955.
During the whole
of the fifties, Mandela was the victim of various forms of repression.
He was banned, arrested and imprisoned. For much of the latter half
of the decade, he was one of the accused in the mammoth Treason Trial,
at great cost to his legal practice and his political work. After
the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960, the ANC was outlawed, and Mandela,
still on trial, was detained.
In 1961 Umkhonto
we Sizwe was formed, with Mandela as its commander-in-chief. In 1962
Mandela left the country unlawfully and travelled abroad for several
months. In Ethiopia he addressed the Conference of the Pan African
Freedom Movement of East and Central Africa, and was warmly received
by senior political leaders in several countries. During this trip
Mandela, anticipating an intensification of the armed struggle, began
to arrange guerrilla training for members of Umkhonto we Sizwe.
Not long after
his return to South Africa Mandela was arrested and charged with
illegal exit from the country, and incitement to strike.
Mandela was
convicted and sentenced to five years imprisonment. While serving
his sentence he was charged, in the Rivonia Trial, with sabotage.
Mandela s statements in court during these trials are classics in
the history of the resistance to apartheid, and they have been an
inspiration to all who have opposed it. His statement from the dock
in the Rivonia Trial ends with these words:
"I
have fought against white domination, and I have fought against
black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and
free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with
equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and
to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared
to die."
Mandela was
sentenced to life imprisonment and started his prison years in the
notorious Robben Island Prison, a maximum security prison on a small
island 7Km off the coast near Cape Town. In April 1984 he was transferred
to Pollsmoor Prison in Cape Town and in December 1988 he was moved
the Victor Verster Prison near Paarl from where he was eventually
released. While in prison, Mandela flatly rejected offers made by
his jailers for remission of sentence in exchange for accepting
the bantustan policy by recognising the independence of the Transkei
and agreeing to settle there. Again in the 'eighties Mandela rejected
an offer of release on condition that he renounce violence. Prisoners
cannot enter into contracts. Only free men can negotiate, he said.
Click image for map
Released on
11 February 1990, Mandela plunged wholeheartedly into his life's
work, striving to attain the goals he and others had set out almost
four decades earlier. In 1991, at the first national conference
of the ANC held inside South Africa after being banned for decades,
Nelson Mandela was elected President of the ANC while his lifelong
friend and colleague, Oliver Tambo, became the organisation's National
Chairperson.
Nelson Mandela
has never wavered in his devotion to democracy, equality and learning.
Despite terrible provocation, he has never answered racism with
racism. His life has been an inspiration, in South Africa and throughout
the world, to all who are oppressed and deprived, to all who are
opposed to oppression and deprivation.
In a life that
symbolises the triumph of the human spirit over man s inhumanity
to man, Nelson Mandela accepted the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize on behalf
of all South Africans who suffered and sacrificed so much to bring
peace to our land.
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