vidz replied: "Born 1918 at Umata in the Transkei,South Arica
The first black president of South Africa
Although Nelson Mandela is related to the XHOSA family,he spent much of his childhood herding cattle.After goin to university,he qualified as a lawyer.
Mandela helped form the Yoth League of the African National Congress in1943.The youth League stressed the need of ANC to identify with the hardships and struggles of ordinary black ppl against racial discrimination.
The ANC led peacful mass protests against apartheid,the policy introduced by the national party in 1948 to justify and strengthen domination.Many protesters were imprisone or killed.In 1960 the ANC was outlawed.In reply Mandela and others established 'Umkhonto we Swize" (Spear of the natin), a guerrilla army in 1961
In 1964 after mnths in hidng Mandela was arrested and imprisoned for life.As a result of internal and international pressure Mandela was eventually released in 1990 by Presiden F.W. Clark . Mandela led the ANC in negotiations and these resulted in t he 1st democratic electons to be held in South Africa .The ANC won easily and Mandela became the President.In his new role Mandela prompted reconcillation amongst all South Africans."
white_phant0m replied: "Mandela, Nelson Rolihlahla (1918- ), South African activist, winner of the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize, and the first black president of South Africa (1994-1999). Born in Umtata, South Africa, in what is now Eastern Cape province, Mandela was the son of a Xhosa-speaking Thembu chief. He attended the University of Fort Hare in Alice where he became involved in the political struggle against the racial discrimination practiced in South Africa. He was expelled in 1940 for participating in a student demonstration. After moving to Johannesburg, he completed his course work by correspondence through the University of South Africa and received a bachelor’s degree in 1942. Mandela then studied law at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. He became increasingly involved with the African National Congress (ANC), a multiracial nationalist movement which sought to bring about democratic political change in South Africa. Mandela helped establish the ANC Youth League in 1944 and became its president in 1951.
The National Party (NP) came to power in South Africa in 1948 on a political platform of white supremacy. The official policy of apartheid, or forced segregation of the races, began to be implemented under NP rule. In 1952 the ANC staged a campaign known as the Defiance Campaign, when protesters across the country refused to obey apartheid laws. That same year Mandela became one of the ANC’s four deputy presidents. In 1952 he and his friend Oliver Tambo were the first blacks to open a law practice in South Africa. In the face of government harassment and with the prospect of the ANC being officially banned, Mandela and others devised a plan. Called the “M” plan after Mandela, it organized the ANC into small units of people who could then encourage grassroots participation in antiapartheid struggles.
By the late 1950s Mandela, with Oliver Tambo and others, moved the ANC in a more militant direction against the increasingly discriminatory policies of the government. He was charged with treason in 1956 because of the ANC’s increased activity, particularly in the Defiance Campaign, but he was acquitted after a five-year trial. In 1957 Mandela divorced his first wife, Evelyn Mase; in 1958 he married Nomzamo Madikizela, a social worker, who became known as Winnie Mandela.
In March 1960 the ANC and its rival, the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), called for a nationwide demonstration against South Africa’s pass laws, which controlled the movement and employment of blacks and forced them to carry identity papers. After police massacred 69 blacks demonstrating in Sharpeville (see Sharpeville Massacre), both the ANC and the PAC were banned. After Sharpeville the ANC abandoned the strategy of nonviolence, which until that time had been an important part of its philosophy. Mandela helped to establish the ANC’s military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), in December 1961. He was named its commander-in-chief and went to Algeria for military training. Back in South Africa, he was arrested in August 1962 and sentenced to five years in prison for incitement and for leaving the country illegally.
While Mandela was in prison, ANC colleagues who had been operating in hiding were arrested at Rivonia, outside of Johannesburg. Mandela was put on trial with them for sabotage, treason, and violent conspiracy. He was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment in June 1964. For the next 18 years he was imprisoned on Robben Island and held under harsh conditions with other political prisoners. Despite the maximum security of the Robben Island prison, Mandela and other leaders were able to keep in contact with the antiapartheid movement covertly. Mandela wrote much of his autobiography secretly in prison. The manuscript was smuggled out and was eventually completed and published in 1994 as Long Walk to Freedom. Later, Mandela was moved to the maximum-security Pollsmoor Prison near Cape Town. Mandela became an international symbol of resistance to apartheid during his long years of imprisonment, and world leaders continued to demand his release.
In response to both international and domestic pressure, the South African government, under the leadership of President F. W. de Klerk, lifted the ban against the ANC and released Mandela in February 1990. Soon after his release from prison he became estranged from Winnie Mandela, who had played a key leadership role in the antiapartheid movement during his incarceration. Although Winnie had won international recognition for her defiance of the government, immediately before Mandela’s release she had come into conflict with the ANC over a controversial kidnapping and murder trial that involved her young bodyguards. The Mandelas were divorced in 1996.
Mandela, who enjoyed enormous popularity, assumed the leadership of the ANC and led negotiations with the government for an end to apartheid. While white South Africans considered sharing power a big step, black South Africans wanted nothing less than a complete transfer of power. Mandela played a crucial role in resolving differences. For their efforts, he and de Klerk were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993. The following year South Africa held its first multiracial elections, and Mandela became president.
Mandela sought to calm the fears of white South Africans and of potential international investors by trying to balance plans for reconstruction and development with financial caution. His Reconstruction and Development Plan allotted large amounts of money to the creation of jobs and housing and to the development of basic health care. In December 1996 Mandela signed into law a new South African constitution. The constitution established a federal system with a strong central government based on majority rule, and it contained guarantees of the rights of minorities and of freedom of expression. Mandela, who had announced that he would not run for reelection in 1999, stepped down as party leader of the ANC in late 1997 and was succeeded by South African deputy president Thabo Mbeki. Mandela's presidency came to an end in June 1999, when the ANC won legislative elections and selected Mbeki as South Africa's next president.."
Can anyone recommend me any books for summer reading? I have read: Sherlock Holmes (Series), Flags of Our Fathers, Crime and Punishment, The Joy Luck Club, Catch-22, Dr. Scarpetta series by Patricia Cornwell, and Stephaine Plum series by Janet Evanvoich, The Pursuit of Happiness, Rise of Rebellion, All Quiet on the Western Front, etc.
I enjoy Fiction (Mystery, Adventure, Drama, Comedy, etc.) I enjoy Classics and biographies. I am entering the 12th grade in high school (17 years old). I don't want any teen book recommendations. So please no Twilight, Harry Potter, Narnia, etc.
To my dismay I did not enjoy: Sue Grafton, Kathy Reich, Marry Higgens Clark, Slaughterhouse-Five, The Other Boleyn Girl,
I also own: Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela, Gandhi biographies, Count of Monte Crisco, The Three Musketeers, Las Miserables, Shogun...
Lucifer replied: "How about reading some Steinbeck--Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden.
Dickens and Shakespeare are always good.
If you're looking for a challenge, try James Joyce."
What a co-incidence? Please help? I just read the book "Famous Peacemakers in the History".
It comprises the Commendation & Biography of Nelson Mandela, Arun Gandhi, Mother Teresa, Louis Braille, Helen Keller, Mhatma Gandhi, Dalai Lama, Florence Nightingale, Jehan Sadat, Lord Baden Powell & Lady Baden Powell.
What makes me surprise is... ALL of them were vegetarians (as I know). This book is nothing about vegetarianism. But is that a co-incidence these peasemakers/humanitarians were vegetarians, or were there any other "motivation" for them to stay vegetarianism?
Faye replied: "Most people who want peace will extend that need not just to humans, but to nonhuman animals as well."
The Great Whizzy Kiddo! replied: "It's not coincidence. There was this fictional experiment (I'm not sure whether it was real.) that tried to prove something.
Two kids, twins actually, were brought up in identical environments. There was onnly one difference between the two. One was grown as a vegetarian, and the other as a non-vegetarian. Whether by coincidence or not, the veggie twin was more pacific than his twin. He could be a peacemaker, while the other fellow was not so peaceful.
Could this prove that vegetarian people are more peaceful? I'm not sure."
TheOne replied: "I have no idea.
Probably a coincidence."
papamoto22 replied: "No, I don't think so. To want peace is to be spiritual. You understand others the same as yourself and wish to end suffering. And to eat vegetarian is spiritual. You understand animals to be the same as yourself and wish to end their suffering."
lo_mcg replied: "Vegetarian or not, some of the people whose names you list are difficult to describe as 'peacemakers'.
The Baden Powells started a paramilitary organisation for children.
And as for that old fraud Mother Theresa - out and out hypocrite; said that suffering was a gift from God; a friend to the worst of the rich, taking misappropriated money from the Hiaiti's dictators the Duvalier family and praising their regime in return .Where did that money, and all the other donations, go? The primitive hospice in Calcutta was as run down when she died as it always had been—she preferred California clinics when she got sick herself.
To try and claim that all those who have compassion and work to better things for the human race are vegetarian is manifestly false.
And I don't know about the dietary choices of many of the others you mention; but I can assure you Nelson Mandela is no vegetarian"
hugosanchezlucas replied: "There's nothing to do with that. There many straight edges (we are vegans) that are pretty violent. Of course there are also good and pacific people (like me) but being vegan is not the same.
Enjoy yourself!"
kjh replied: "I don't know about that, Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian, and looked down on meat eaters. He did not broker peace."
Need Inspiration... Essay Topic on Heroes and Beowulf (Brit Lit)? In a three page papaer, copmare and contrast Beowulf with your own hero.
That's the assignment.
I chose Nelson Mandela and i have his biography.
the essay's due on monday and... yeah. need inspiration.
right now, i'm thinking about emphasizing how Beowulf *is* a hero because of his characteristics that were highly valued in his respective society. (that provides common ground to compare Mandela and Beowulf...) good idea?
M K replied: "You might consider comparing intellect (Beowulf was quite clever, as is Mandela) and contrasting fighting styles. Mandela "fought" in a much different way. Another point to consider is the heroic "boast" (special word in the poem--can't remember what it's called..tsk) which in Beowulf's time was expected. There is a humility in Mandela."
kimanne replied: "this ought to be easy. Jot down major accomplishments of both, personality traits, problems faced, how they overcame problems, etc. Then circle similarities and underline differences. After you do that, come up with a topic sentence. Earn extra points by quoting parts of Beowolf and parts of Mandela's biography to support your ideas.
Share when you finish it ... I bet you can make it really interesting!"
ladybird27 replied: "weird, i had this same assignment not too long ago... i used oprah, but some points my teacher really liked were:
Beowulf is like that hero you hate to love, he does selfless acts for selfish reasons. he is too proud and arrogant, the main reason he puts his life on the line is not for the benefit of those who need it, it is only to benefit himself and his popularity.
You also should compare and contrast the qualities of and anglo-saxon hero and a modern day hero:
-an anglo-saxon hero must have five qualities: courage, loyalty, wisdom, physical strength, and the pride to boast about oneself.
- a modern day hero shares alot of these same qualities but humility takes the place of boasting. we look at a hero as someone who is the "hometown hero," someone who doesnt necessarily preform a huge act, yet they do all they can to help for the sole purpose of helping. like someone calling 911 if their elderly neighbor falls down the stairs or something like that, you know what i mean? and anglo-saxon hero wants only the glory and fame. they preform the huge act to put on a show, not to help just for the purpose of helping.
hah i hope that all makes sense and i hope i helped =] good luck with your essay!"

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