Nelson Mandela
Nelson
Mandela (1918) was born at Qunu, near Umtata, Transkei. His
father, Henry Mgadla Mandela, was chief councillor to
Thembuland's acting paramount chief David Dalindyebo. When his father died, Mandela became the chief's
ward and was groomed for the chieftainship.
Mandela matriculated at Healdtown Methodist Boarding
School and then started a BA degree at Fort Hare. As an
SRC member he participated in a student strike and was expelled, along with the
late Oliver Tambo, in 1940. He completed his degree
by correspondence from Johannesburg, did
articles of clerkship and enrolled for an LLB at the University of the Witwatersrand. In 1944
he helped found the ANC Youth League, whose Programme of Action was adopted by
the ANC in 1949.
Mandela was elected national
volunteer-in-chief of the 1952 Defiance Campaign. He travelled the country
organising resistance to discriminatory legislation. He was given a suspended
sentence for his part in the campaign. Shortly afterwards a banning order
confined him to Johannesburg for six
months. During this period he formulated the "M Plan", in terms of
which ANC branches were broken down into underground cells. By 1952 Mandela and
Tambo had opened the first black legal firm in the
country, and Mandela was both Transvaal
president of the ANC and deputy national president. A petition by the Transvaal
Law Society to strike Mandela off the roll of attorneys was refused by the
Supreme Court.
In the 'fifties, after being forced through constant bannings
to resign officially from the ANC, Mandela analysed the Bantustan policy as a
political swindle. He predicted mass removals, political persecutions
and police terror. For the second half of the 'fifties, he was one of the
accused in the Treason Trial. With Duma Nokwe, he conducted the defence. When the ANC was banned
after the Sharpeville massacre in 1960, he was detained until 1961 when he went
underground to lead a campaign for a new national convention. Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), the
military wing of the ANC, was born the same year.
Under his leadership it launched a campaign of sabotage against government and
economic installations.
In 1962 Mandela left the country for
military training in Algeria and to
arrange training for other MK members. On his return he was arrested for
leaving the country illegally and for incitement to strike. He conducted his
own defence. He was convicted and jailed for five years in November 1962. While
serving his sentence, he was charged, in the Rivonia
trial, with sabotage and sentenced to life imprisonment. A decade before being
imprisoned, Mandela had spoken out against the introduction of Bantu Education,
recommending that community activists "make every home, every shack or
rickety structure a centre of learning".
Robben Island, where
he was imprisoned, became a centre for learning, and Mandela was a central
figure in the organised political education classes. In prison Mandela never
compromised his political principles and was always a source of strength for
the other prisoners. During the 'seventies he refused the offer of a remission
of sentence if he recognised Transkei and
settled there. In the 'eighties he again rejected PW Botha's
offer of freedom if he renounced violence.
It is
significant that shortly after his release on Sunday 11 February 1990, Mandela
and his delegation agreed to the suspension of armed struggle.
Mandela has honorary degrees from more
than 50 international universities and is chancellor of the University of the
North. He was inaugurated as the first democratically elected State President
of South Africa on 10 May
1994 and served until June 1999. Nelson Mandela retired
from Public life in June 1999. He currently resides in his birth place Qunu, Transkei.
In 1988 he and his then wife Winnie
Mandela were awarded the United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights on
the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.
Links
Article 'Nelson Mandela thanks UN for efforts to secure
his release; urges continued sanctions against South Africa' in UN Chronicle, September 1990.
Address by president Nelson
Mandela to the 49th session of the General Assembly, 3
October 1994.
Related subject
Day of
Solidarity with South African Political Prisoners
Stamp catalogue - 70th birthday
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 18 July 1988
Stamp catalogue -
85th birthday
Netherlands 18 July 2003
Stamp catalogue - other issues
Papua New Guinea 6 August 2009
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last revised: 27 March