Nelson Mandela Research Paper

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Nelson Mandela
Nelson Mandela was born 18 July 1918 in the village of Mvezo, in South Africa. From a young age, Mandela witnessed the injustice committed by the government first hand. In 1943, when he was older he co-founded ANCYL (African National Congress Youth League), an anti-apartheid youth organization. The group used tactics such as peaceful protests, strikes and boycotts. The police responded to these peaceful actions with killing and beating the protesters. Nelson Mandela soon realized that peaceful actions against the government would not work; the government simply would not listen. In 1961, Nelson Mandela became the leader of ANC’s armed branch; they carried out sabotage missions and guerilla warfare against the government. The …show more content…

She had previously been a politician and had sat in parliament, and been the vice cultural-minister. She became the leader of the women’s wing of the African National Congress, and was a huge inspiration to South Africa’s women.
In 1990, Nelson Mandela was released from captivity, and he went back to politics and fought for a democratic multi-ethnical state. He told the South-African people that in order to move forward they had to forgive and forget about the injustice, which the population had been put through. After being released from a 27-year prison sentence, Mandela was very forgiving and did not seem to hold a grudge at all, not even after 27 years; he was ready to move forward into a better South Africa.
In 1993 Nelson Mandela along with Frederic Willem de Clerk were awarded the Nobel’s peace prize for their work to overthrow the apartheid policies. The year after, Mandela was elected president of South Africa. During the 1995 world rugby championship, South Africa won on home ground. He showed great support towards the white national sport, even though the whites were responsible for his arrest. The reason, for which this was a significant event, was that even though the white government had oppressed Nelson Mandela all his life, he still publicly supported the rugby finals and made a statement wearing a white man’s jersey. This appearance was a symbol of unity once again, between whites and blacks in South