Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (18 July 1918 – 5 December 2013) was a
South African anti-apartheid
revolutionary, politician, and philanthropist,
who served as President of South
Africa from 1994 to 1999. He was
the country's first black chief executive, and the first elected in a fully representative democratic election. His government focused on dismantling the legacy of apartheid through tackling institutionalized racism and fostering racial reconciliation. Politically an African nationalist and democratic
socialist, he served as President of the African National Congress (ANC) party from 1991 to 1997.
A Xhosa born to the Thembu royal family, Mandela attended Fort Hare University and the University of Witwatersrand, where he
studied law. Living in Johannesburg,
he became involved in anti-colonial politics, joining the ANC and becoming
a founding member of its Youth
League. After the Afrikaner minority government of the National Party established apartheid – a system of racial segregation that privileged whites – in 1948, he rose to prominence in
the ANC's 1952 anti-apartheid Defiance
Campaign, was appointed superintendent of the organization’s Transvaal branch, and presided over the 1955 Congress of the People. Working as a
lawyer, he was repeatedly arrested for seditious activities and, with the ANC
leadership, was unsuccessfully prosecuted in the Treason Trial from 1956 to 1961. Influenced by Marxism, he secretly joined the South African Communist Party (SACP). Although initially committed
to non-violent protest, in association with the SACP he co-founded the militant Umkhonto we Sizwe in 1961, leading a sabotage campaign against the government. In 1962,
he was arrested, convicted of conspiracy to overthrow the state, and sentenced
to life imprisonment in the Rivonia
Trial.
Mandela served 27 years in
prison, initially on Robben
Island, and later in Pollsmoor
Prison and Victor Verster Prison. Amid
international pressure and growing fear of a racial civil war, President F. W. de Klerk released him in 1990. Mandela and de
Klerk negotiated an end to apartheid and organised the 1994 multiracial elections, in which
Mandela led the ANC to victory and became president. Leading a broad coalition government, which
promulgated a new constitution,
Mandela emphasised reconciliation between the country's racial groups and
created the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to
investigate past human rights abuses. While continuing with the
former government's economic
liberalism, his administration introduced measures to encourage land reform, combat poverty, and
expand healthcare services. Internationally, he acted as mediator in the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial and served as Secretary General of the Non-Aligned Movement from 1998–99. Declining a second
presidential term, he was succeeded by his deputy, Thabo Mbeki. Mandela became an elder
statesman, focusing on charitable work in combating poverty and HIV/AIDS through the Nelson Mandela Foundation.
Mandela was a controversial
figure for much of his life. Critics on the right denounced him as a communist terrorist, while those on the radical left deemed him too eager to negotiate and
reconcile with apartheid's supporters. Conversely, he gained international acclaim
for his activism, having received more
than 250 honors, including the Nobel
Peace Prize, the US Presidential
Medal of Freedom, and the Soviet Lenin
Peace Prize. He is held in deep respect within South Africa, where he is often
referred to by his Xhosa clan name, Madiba,
or as Tata ("Father"), and described as
the "Father of the Nation".
Mandela was born on 18 July
1918 in the village of Mvezo in Umtata,
then a part of South Africa's Cape
Province. Given the forename
Rolihlahla, a Xhosa term colloquially meaning "troublemaker", in later years he became known by his
clan name, Madiba. His patrilineal great-grandfather, Ngubengcuka, was
ruler of the Thembu people in the Transkeian Territories of South Africa's modern Eastern Cape Province. One of this king's sons, named Mandela, became Nelson's
grandfather and the source of his surname. Because
Mandela was only the king's child by a wife of the Ixhiba clan, a so-called "Left-Hand
House", the descendants of his cadet
branch of the royal family were morganatic, ineligible to inherit the
throne but recognised as hereditary royal councillors. His father, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa,
was a local chief and councillor to the monarch; he had
been appointed to the position in 1915, after his predecessor was accused of
corruption by a governing white magistrate. In
1926 Gadla was also sacked for corruption, but Nelson was told that he had lost
his job for standing up to the magistrate's unreasonable demands. A devotee of the god Qamata, Gadla was a polygamist, having four wives, four
sons and nine daughters, who lived in different villages. Nelson's mother was
Gadla's third wife, Nosekeni Fanny, who was daughter of Nkedama of the Right
Hand House and a member of the amaMpemvu clan of Xhosa.
"No
one in my family had ever attended school [...] on the first day of school my
teacher, Miss Mdingane, gave each of us an English name. This was the custom
among Africans in those days and was undoubtedly due to the British bias of our
education. That day, Miss Mdingane told me that my new name was Nelson. Why
this particular name, I have no idea."
—
Mandela, 1994
Later stating
that his early life was dominated by traditional Thembu custom and taboo, Mandela grew up with two
sisters in his mother's kraal in the village of Qunu, where he tended herds as a
cattle-boy, spending much time outside with other boys. Both his parents were illiterate, but being a devout Christian,
his mother sent him to a local Methodist school when he was about seven.
Baptised a Methodist, Mandela was given the English forename of
"Nelson" by his teacher. When
Mandela was about nine, his father came to stay at Qunu, where he died of an
undiagnosed ailment which Mandela believed to be lung disease. Feeling "cut adrift", he
later said that he inherited his father's "proud rebelliousness" and
"stubborn sense of fairness".
Mandela's mother took him to
the "Great Place" palace at Mqhekezweni, where he was entrusted under
the guardianship of Thembu regent, Chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo.
Although he did not see his mother again for many years, Mandela felt that
Jongintaba and his wife Noengland treated him as their own child, raising him
alongside their son Justice and daughter Nomafu. As Mandela attended church services
every Sunday with his guardians, Christianity became a significant part of his
life. He attended a Methodist
mission school located next to the palace, studying English, Xhosa, history and
geography. He developed a love of
African history, listening to the tales told by elderly visitors to the palace,
and became influenced by the anti-imperialist rhetoric of the visiting Chief
Joyi. At the time he nevertheless
considered the European colonialists not as oppressors but as benefactors who
had brought education and other benefits to southern Africa. Aged 16, he, Justice and several other
boys travelled to Tyhalarha to undergo the circumcision ritual that symbolically marked their
transition from boys to men; the rite over, he was given the name Dalibunga.
Intending to
gain skills needed to become a privy councillor for the Thembu royal house,
Mandela began his secondary education at Clarkebury
Methodist High School Engcobo, a
Western-style institution that was the largest school for black Africans in Thembuland. Made to socialise with other students
on an equal basis, he claimed that he lost his "stuck up" attitude,
becoming best friends with a girl for the first time; he began playing sports
and developed his lifelong love of gardening. Completing
his Junior Certificate in two years, in
1937 he moved to Healdtown, the
Methodist College in Fort
Beaufort attended by most Thembu
royalty, including Justice. The
headmaster emphasized the superiority of English culture and government, but
Mandela became increasingly interested in native African culture, making his
first non-Xhosa friend, a Sotho
language-speaker, and coming under the influence of one of his favourite teachers,
a Xhosa who broke taboo by marrying a Sotho. Spending
much of his spare time long-distance running and boxing, in his second year
Mandela became a prefect.
With
Jongintaba's backing, Mandela began work on a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree at
the University of Fort Hare, an
elite black institution in Alice,
Eastern Cape, with around 150 students. There he studied English, anthropology, politics, native
administration, and Roman Dutch
law in his first year, desiring
to become an interpreter or clerk in the Native Affairs Department. Mandela stayed in the Wesley House
dormitory, befriending his own kinsman, K.
D. Matanzima, as well as Oliver
Tambo, who became a close friend and comrade for decades to come. Continuing his interest in sport,
Mandela took up ballroom dancing, performed
in a drama society play about Abraham
Lincoln, and gave Bible classes in the local community as part
of the Students Christian Association. Although having friends connected to the African National Congress (ANC) and the anti-imperialist
movement who wanted South Africa to be independent of the British Empire, Mandela avoided any
involvement, and became a vocal
supporter of the British war effort when the Second
World War broke out. Helping
found a first-year students' house committee which challenged the dominance of
the second-years, at the end of his first year he became
involved in a Students'
Representative Council (SRC)
boycott against the quality of food, for which he was temporarily suspended
from the university; he left without receiving a degree.
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