
JULY 18

Nelson Mandella
Born July 18, 1918 in Transkei, South Africa
South African statesman and president (1994-99)
Nelson
Mandella
Original Name - Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela
Mandela's father had four wives and Mandela's
mother, Nosekeni Fanny, was the third. He spent
most of his childhood with his mother's family
and was the first member to attend school. It was
there that a Methodist teacher gave him the name
Nelson, finding Rolihlahla too difficult to
pronounce. Nelson's father died when he was nine,
and the boy was adopted by the Regent Jongintaba
and groomed to assume high office. As Thembu
royalty, Nelson attended Wesleyan mission school,
Clarkebury Boarding Institute and Wesleyan
college. He studied at Fort Hare University but
was asked to leave after boycotting against
university policies.
Fleeing an arranged marriage, Mandela ran away to
Johannesburg, where he worked a variety of jobs,
including guard and clerk, while completing his
bachelor's degree via correspondence. He then
enrolled at the University of Witwatersrand to
study law. He became actively involved in the
anti-apartheid movement and joined the African
National Congress (ANC) in 1942.
Within the ANC, a small group of young Africans
banded together calling themselves the African
National Congress Youth League. Their goal was to
transform the ANC into a mass grassroots
movement, deriving strength from millions of
rural peasants and working people who had no
voice under the current regime. Specifically, the
group believed that the ANC's old tactics of
polite petitioning were ineffective. In 1949, the
ANC officially adopted the Youth League's methods
of boycott, strike, civil disobedience and
non-cooperation with policy goals of full
citizenship, redistribution of land, trade union
rights, and free and compulsory education for all
children, among others.
For 20 years, Mandela directed a campaign of
peaceful, non-violent defiance against the South
African government and its racist policies,
including the 1952 Defiance Campaign and the 1955
Congress of the People. He founded the law firm
Mandela and Tambo to provide free and low-cost
legal counsel to unrepresented blacks.
In 1956, Mandela and 150 others were arrested and
charged with treason for their political
advocacy, though they were eventually acquitted.
Meanwhile, the ANC was being challenged by the
Africanists, a new breed of Black activists who
believed that the pacifist method of the ANC was
ineffective. By 1959, the ANC lost much of its
militant support when the Africanists broke away
to form the Pan Africanist Congress.
In 1961, Mandela, who was formerly committed to
non-violent protest, began to believe that armed
struggle was the only way to achieve change. He
co-founded Umkhonto we Sizwe, also known as MK,
an armed offshoot of the ANC dedicated to
sabotage and guerilla war tactics to end
apartheid. He orchestrated a three-day national
workers strike in 1961 for which he was arrested
in 1962. He was sentenced to five years in prison
for the strike, and then brought to trial again
in 1963. This time, he and 10 other ANC leaders
were sentenced to life imprisonment for political
offenses, including sabotage
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 Laws through a University of London
correspondence program while incarcerated.
Mandela continued to be such a potent symbol of
black resistance that a coordinated international
campaign for his release was launched. A 1981
memoir by South African intelligence agent Gordon
Winter described a plot by the South African
government to plan Mandela's escape so as to
shoot him during the recapture. The plot, which
was foiled by British intelligence, exemplified
the power and esteem Mandela had in the global
political community.
In 1982, Mandela and other ANC leaders were moved
to Pollsmoor Prison, allegedly to enable contact
between them and the South African government. In
1985, President P.W. Botha offered Mandela's
release in exchange for renouncing armed
struggle; the prisoner flatly rejected the offer.
With increasing local and international pressure
for his release, the government participated with
several talks with Mandela over the years, but no
deal was ever made. It wasn't until Botha
suffered a stroke and was replaced by Frederik
Willem de Klerk that Mandela's release was
announced in February 1990. De Klerk unbanned the
ANC, removed restrictions on political groups,
and suspended executions.
Upon his release, Mandela immediately urged
foreign powers not to reduce their pressure on
the South African government for constitutional
reform. While he stated his commitment to work
toward peace, he declared that the ANC's armed
struggle would continue until the black majority
received the right to vote.
Mandela was elected president of the African
National Congress in 1991 with lifelong friend
and colleague, Oliver Tombo, serving as National
Chairperson. Mandela continued to negotiate with
President F.W. de Klerk toward the country's
first multi-racial elections. The negotiations
were often strained, and news of violent
eruptions, including the assassination of ANC
leader Chris Hani, continued throughout the
country.
Negotiation prevailed, however, and on April 27,
1994, South Africa held its first democratic
elections. Mandela was inaugurated at age 77 as
the country's first black president on May 10,
1994 with de Klerk as his first deputy. In 1993,
Mandela shared the Nobel Prize for Peace with de
Klerk for their work towards dismantling
apartheid, and in 1995 he was awarded the Order
of Merit.
Mandela retired from active politics at the 1999
general election but maintained a busy schedule,
raising money for his Mandela Foundation to build
schools and clinics in South Africa's rural
heartland and serving as a mediator in Burundi's
civil war. He was diagnosed and treated for
prostate cancer in 2001 and in June 2004, at age
85, he announced his formal retirement from
public life.
On July 18, 2007, Mandela convened a group of
world leaders, including Graca Machel, Desmond
Tutu, Kofi Annan, Ela Bhatt, Gro Harlem
Brundtland, Jimmy Carter, Li Zhaoxing, Mary
Robinson and Muhammad Yunus to address the
world's toughest issues. Named "The
Elders," the group is committed to working
publicly and privately to find solutions to
problems around the globe. Mandela is also
committed to the fight against AIDS, a disease
that killed his son, Makgatho Mandela, in 2005.
Mandela was married three times: to Evelyn Ntoko
Mase from until 1944-1957, they had four
children; to Winnie Madikizela-Mandela
(1958-1996), they had two daughters; and to
Graça Machel in 1998.
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