Nelson Mandela |
About Nelson Mandela
An Interview with Nelson Mandela
More About Nelson Mandela
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Nelson Mandela was born in 1918 to one of the royal families of the Transkei, the eldest
son of a Temba chief. He studied at the University of Fort Hare until he was expelled for
participating in a student protest. After moving to Johannesburg he completed his arts
degree by correspondence with the University of South Africa in 1942 and then studied law at
the University of Witwatersrand. He joined the African National Congress in 1942.
After the National Party came to power in 1948 and inplemented apartheid, Mandela became
one of the four deputy presidents of the ANC and took part in its Defiance Campaign of 1952.
He was charged with treason in 1956, but acquitted after a five-year trial. His charisma and
planning underpinned everything the ANC did in the crucial years up to 1963, when he was
arrested, tried and sentenced to life imprisonment. He spent the next eighteen years
in the maximum-security prison for political prisoners on Robben Island, and later moved to
Pollsmoor Prison. While in prison he became a potent symbol for the anti-apartheid movement.
In response to increasing domestic and international pressure he was finally freed on 11
February 1990 and the ban against the ANC was lifted. He became leader of the ANC and was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993. In 1994, when South Africa held its first multiracial
elections, Mandela became president and led the country until he stepped down in 1999.
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