Nelson Mandela's life story
Nelson Mandela's timeline
Hey there! Today we're going to talk about the amazing life of Nelson Mandela, who was the first black president of South Africa. He was born in a small village on July 18th, 1918 and was the first in his family to attend school. Even though he was expelled from university for protesting against the institution, he continued to fight for what he believed in. Mandela believed that it was important to have knowledge in order to serve your country and your people. In 1944, he joined the African National Congress (ANC), a political party that aimed to give equal rights and freedoms to everyone in the country. Mandela was part of a group that formed the ANC Youth League, which used grassroots methods like boycotts, strikes, and civil disobedience to get their message across. However, in 1948, the National Party was elected to government and instituted a legal system of racial segregation called Apartheid. Mandela and the ANCYL continued their non-violent protests against racist policies, but he was targeted by the government and arrested on suspicion of treason in 1956. After a long trial, he was acquitted. Mandela then began to advocate for armed resistance against the government, which led to the formation of the Pan-Africanist Congress in 1959. Despite the challenges he faced, Mandela continued to Hello there! Let me introduce you to an extraordinary individual named Nelson Mandela. Although he was born as Johan, he later changed his name to Nelson Mandela. Fascinating, isn't it? As the son of a chief, he had access to the best education available to black people in South Africa during his upbringing.
While attending Fort Hare University, he became involved in student protests and developed a strong opposition to injustice, unfairness, and inequality, which remained with him throughout his life. In the early 1940s, he moved to Johannesburg and experienced the racial discrimination that would later become part of the apartheid laws.
Nelson Mandela worked in the mines and as a clerk in a law firm while continuing his law studies. He joined the African National Congress (ANC), the oldest black political organization in South Africa, and recognized its mission to unite the African people and create a strong nation.
In 1948, the Nationalist government came into power and apartheid became the official policy. Nelson Mandela saw this as a clear enemy in power and an opportunity to mobilize the people. The government attempted to justify apartheid as a policy of "good neighborliness," but Nelson Mandela and others saw through this deception.
In 1955, the ANC and other organizations called for people of all races to gather in club town to approve the freedom charter, a blueprint for a free, democratic, and multiracial South Africa where everyone would be treated equally. Nelson Mandela played a crucial role in organizing this gathering, but unfortunately, the government banned him from attending, and he had to watch from the sidelines.
In 1956, Nelson Mandela and other leaders in the Congress movement were charged with high treason. The trial was clearly designed to suppress their fight for freedom and equality.fight for justice and equality for all South Africans.
Nelson ran away to Johannesburg in order to avoid a pre-arranged marriage it was 1941 and for the first time Nelson came face to face with the brutal reality of a racially divided South Africa by entering the city as a kind of anonymous black person he gets a first-hand experience of what black life is like for urban black South Africans at that time and he gets a kind of immediate confrontation with the white apartheid racist State I think that he had two languages he had a deep historical language from his own learning his own training within his tribal background but I also think that he had a language of the law he had a completely contemporary language and he brought those two together in the language of human rights he began attending meetings of the African National Congress an organization that aimed to establish a democratic government during this time he married his first wife Evelyn the apartheid regime really begins to be kind of built up after 1948
About the Creator
Rotondwa Mudzweda
Hi my name is mudzweda rotondwa and am a writer who love loving and also sharing information through teaching and writing



Comments (1)
Very interesting! Great work!