Nelson
Mandela, born in 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.
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