Former president of
South Africa and world acclaimed international statesman
Date of birth: 18 July
1918, Mvezo, Transkei.
Date of death: 5
December 2013, Houghton, Johannesburg, South Africa
Nelson Rolihlahla
Mandela was born on 18 July 1918 in the small village of Mvezo, on the Mbashe
River, district of Umtata in Transkei, South Africa. His Father named him
Rolihlahla, which means "pulling the branch of the tree", or more
colloquially "troublemaker." The name Nelson was not given until his
first day at school.
Nelson Mandela's
father, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa, was the chief "by blood and custom"
of Mvezo, a position confirmed by the paramount chief of the Thembu, Jongintaba
Dalindyebo. Although the family is descended from Thembu royalty (one of
Mandela's ancestors was paramount chief in the 18th century) the line had passed
down to Mandela through lesser 'Houses', rather than through a line of
potential succession. The clan name of Madiba, which is often used as a form of
address for Mandela, comes from the ancestral chief.
Until the advent of
European domination in the region, chieftaincy of the Thembu (and other tribes
of the Xhosa nation) was by patrimonial decent, with the first son of the major
wife (known as the Great House) becoming automatic heir, and the first son of
the second wife (the highest of the lessor wives, also known as the Right Hand
House) being relegated to creating a minor chiefdom. The sons of the third wife
(known as the Left Hand House) were destined to become advisors to the chief.
Nelson Mandela was the
son of the third wife, Noqaphi Nosekeni, and could have otherwise expected to
become a royal advisor. He was one of thirteen children, and had three elder
brothers all of whom were of higher 'rank'. Mandela's mother was a Methodist,
and Nelson followed in her footsteps, attending a Methodist missionary school.
When Nelson Mandela's
father died in 1930, the paramount chief, Jongintaba Dalindyebo, became his
guardian. In 1934, a year during which he attended three month initiation
school (during which he was circumcised), Mandela matriculated from Clarkebury
Missionary school. Four years later he graduated from Healdtown, a strict
Methodist college, and left to pursue higher education at the University of
Fort Hare (South Africa's first university college for Black Africans). It was
here he first met his lifelong friend and associate Oliver Tambo.
Both Nelson Mandela and
Oliver Tambo were expelled from Fort Hare in 1940 for political activism.
Briefly returning to Transkei, Mandela discovered that his guardian had
arranged a marriage for him. He fled towards Johannesburg, where he obtained
work as a night-watchman on a gold mine.
Nelson Mandela moved
into a house in Alexandra, a Black suburb of Johannesburg, with his mother.
Here he met Walter Sisulu and Walter's fiancée Albertina. Mandela started
working as a clerk in a law firm, studying in the evening through a
correspondence course with the University of South Africa (now UNISA) to
complete his first degree. He was awarded his Bachelor's degree in 1941, and in
1942 he was articled to another firm of attorneys and started upon a law degree
at the University of Witwatersrand. Here he worked with a study partner,
Seretse Khama, who would later become the first president of an independent
Botswana.
In 1944 Nelson Mandela
married Evelyn Mase, a cousin of Walter Sisulu. He also began his political
career in earnest, joining the African National Congress, ANC. Finding the
existing leadership of the ANC to be "a dying order of pseudo-liberalism
and conservatism, of appeasement and compromise.", Mandela, along with
Tambo, Sisulu, and a few others formed the African National Congress Youth
League, ANCYL. In 1947 Mandela was elected as secretary of the ANCYL, and
became a member of the Transvaal ANC executive.
By 1948 Nelson Mandela
had failed to pass the exams required for his LLB law degree, and he decided
instead to settle for the 'qualifying' exam which would allow him to practice
as an attorney. When DF Malan's Herenigde Nationale Party (HNP, Re-united
National Party) won the 1948 election, Mandela, Tambo, and Sisulu acted. The
existing ANC president was pushed out of office and someone more amenable to
the ideals of the ANCYL was brought in as a replacement. Walter Sisulu proposed
a 'programme of action', which was subsequently adopted by the ANC. Mandela was
made president of the Youth League in 1951.
Nelson Mandela opened
his law office in 1952, and a few months later teamed up with Tambo to create
the first Black legal practice in South Africa. It was difficult for both
Mandela and Tambo to find time for both their legal practice and their
political aspirations. That year Mandela became president of the Transvaal ANC,
but was banned under the Suppression of Communism Act – he was prohibited from
holding office within the ANC, banned from attending ANY meetings, and
restricted to the district around Johannesburg.
Fearing for the future
of the ANC, Nelson Mandela and Oliver Tambo initiated the M-plan (M for
Mandela). The ANC would be broken down into cells so that it could continue to
operate, if necessary, underground. Under the banning order, Mandela was
restricted from attending meeting, but he drove down to Kliptown in June 1955
to be part of the Congress of the People; and by keeping to the shadows and the
periphery of the crowd, Mandela watched as the Freedom Charter was adopted by
all the groups involved. His increasing involvement in the anti-Apartheid
struggle, however, caused problems for his marriage and in December that year
Evelyn left him, citing irreconcilable differences.
On 5 December 1956, in
response to the adoption of the Freedom Charter at the Congress of the People,
the Apartheid government in South Africa arrested a total 156 people, including
Chief Albert Luthuli (president of the ANC) and Nelson Mandela. This was almost
the entire executive of the African National Congress (ANC), Congress of
Democrats, South African Indian Congress, Coloured People's Congress, and the
South African Congress of Trade Unions (collectively known as the Congress
Alliance). They were charged with "high treason and a countrywide
conspiracy to use violence to overthrow the present government and replace it
with a communist state." The punishment for high treason was death. The
Treason Trial dragged on, until Mandela and his 29 remaining co-accused were
finally acquitted in March 1961. During the Treason Trial Nelson Mandela met
and married his second wife, Nomzamo Winnie Madikizela.
The 1955 Congress of
the People and its moderate stance against the policies of the Apartheid
government eventually led to the younger, more radical members of the ANC to
break away: the Pan Africanist Congress, PAC, was formed in 1959 under the
leadership of Robert Sobukwe. The ANC and PAC became instant rivals, especially
in the townships. This rivalry came to a head when the PAC rushed ahead of ANC
plans to hold mass protests against the pass laws. On 21 March 1960 at least
180 black Africans were injured and 69 killed when the South African police
opened fire on approximately demonstrators at Sharpeville.
Both the ANC and PAC
responded in 1961 by setting up military wings. Nelson Mandela, in what was a
radical departure from ANC policy, was instrumental in creating the ANC group:
Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation, MK), and Mandela became the MK's first
commander. Both the ANC and PAC were banned by the South African government
under the Unlawful Organisations Act in 1961. The MK, and the PAC's Poqo,
responded by commencing with campaigns of sabotage.
In 1962 Nelson Mandela
was smuggled out of South Africa. He first attended and addressed the
conference of African nationalist leaders, the Pan-African Freedom Movement, in
Addis Ababa. From there he went to Algeria to undergo guerrilla training, and
then flew to London to catch up with Oliver Tambo (and also to meet members of
the British parliamentary opposition). On his return to South Africa, Mandela
was arrested and sentenced to five years for "incitement and illegally
leaving the country".
On 11 July 1963 a raid
was undertaken on Lilieslief farm in Rivonia, near Johannesburg, which was
being used by the MK as headquarters. The remaining leadership of the MK was
arrested. Nelson Mandela was included at trial with those arrested at
Lilieslief and charged with over 200 counts of "sabotage, preparing for
guerrilla warfare in SA, and for preparing an armed invasion of SA".
Mandela was one of five (out of the ten defendants) at the Rivonia Trail to be
given life sentences and sent to Robben Island. Two more were released, and the
remaining three escaped custody and were smuggled out of the country.
At the end of his four
hour statement to the court Nelson Mandela stated:
"During my
lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have
fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I
have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons
live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I
hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am
prepared to die."
These words are said to
sum up the guiding principles by which he worked for liberation of South
Africa.
In 1976 Nelson Mandela
was approached with an offer by Jimmy Kruger, the Minister for Police serving
under President BJ Vorster, to renounce the struggle and settle in the
Transkei. Mandela refused. By 1982 international pressure against the South
African government to release Nelson Mandela and his compatriots was growing.
The then South African president, PW Botha, arranged for Mandela and Sisulu to
be transferred back to the mainland to Pollsmoor Prison, near Cape Town. In
August 1985, approximately a month after the South African government declares
a state of emergency, Mandela was taken to hospital for an enlarged prostate
gland. On his return to Pollsmoor he was placed in solitary confinement (having
a whole section of the jail to himself).
In 1986 Nelson Mandela
was taken to see the Minister of Justice, Kobie Coetzee, who requested once
again that he 'renounce violence' in order to win his freedom. Despite
refusing, restrictions on Mandela were somewhat lifted: he was allowed visits
from his family, and was even driven around Cape Town by the prison warder. In
May 1988 Mandela was diagnosed with tuberculosis and moved to Tygerberg
hospital for treatment. On release from hospital he was moved to 'secure
quarters' at Victor Verster Prison near Paarl.
By 1989 things were
looking bleak for the Apartheid regime: PW Botha had a stroke, and shortly
after 'entertaining' Mandela at the Tuynhuys, the presidential residence in
Cape Town, he resigned. FW de Klerk was appointed as his successor. Mandela met
with De Klerk in December 1989, and the following year at the opening of
parliament (2 February) De Klerk announced the unbanning of all political
parties and the release of political prisoners (except those guilty of violent
crimes). On 11 February 1990 Nelson Mandela was finally released.
By 1991 the Convention
for a Democratic South Africa, CODESA, was set up to negotiate constitutional
change in South Africa. Both Mandela and De Klerk were key figures in the
negotiations, and their efforts were jointly awarded in December 1993 with the
Nobel Peace Prize. When South Africa's first multi-racial elections were held
in April 1994, the ANC won a 62% majority. (Mandela revealed later that he was
worried that it would achieve the 67% majority that would allow it to re-write
the constitution.) A Government of National Unity, GNU, was formed – based on
an idea proffered by Joe Slovo, the GNU could last for up to five years as a
new constitution was drawn up. It was hoped that this would allay the fears of
South Africa's whites population suddenly faced with majority Black rule.
On 10 May 1994 Nelson
Mandela made his inaugural presidential speech from the Union Building,
Pretoria:
"We have at last,
achieved our political emancipation. we pledge ourselves to liberate all our
people from the continuing bondage of poverty, deprivation, suffering, gender,
and other discrimination. Never, never, and never again shall it be that this
beautiful land will again experience the oppression of one by another... Let
freedom reign. God Bless Africa!"
Shortly after he
published his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom.
In 1997 Nelson Mandela
stepped down as leader of the ANC in favour of Thabo Mbeki, and in 1999 he
relinquished the post of president. Despite claims to have retired, Mandela
continues to have a busy life. He was divorced from Winnie Madikizela-Mandela
in 1996, the same year that the press realised he was having a relationship
with Graça Machel, the widow of Mozambique's former president. After heavy
prompting by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela and Graça Machel were
married on his eightieth birthday, 18 July 1998.
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