Compare And Contrast Gandhi And Nelson Mandela

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Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, more commonly known as “Mahatma” (meaning Great Soul) or “Gandhi” has several fundamental elements of teachings and activities that are of great significance. Gandhi’s beliefs and principles that challenged individuals to conduct themselves in a peaceful and non-violent manner had a profound effect on the world that can still be felt after his death. Gandhi was born in Porbandar, Gujarat, in North West India, on October 2nd 1869, into a Hindu family. His father was the Chief Minister of Porbandar, and his mother’s religious devotion so he was raised with the good moral values. Gandhi was born into a relatively affluent family so he was fortunate enough to receive extensive schooling. Gandhi’s beliefs and ideas …show more content…

This illustrates how even after his Death Gandhi’s teachings had a profound impact on the world. Gandhi and Nelson Mandela’s life journeys and commitment to end the oppression of their respective people coincide. Nelson Mandela was a South African anti-Apartheid leader who spent 27 years in jail for fiercely advocating for an end to racial segregation in South Africa, before eventually being elected as the country 's first black head of government in 1994. The two leaders were both lawyers who spent time in jail cells of Johannesburg’s Old Fort prison which later became a museum to …show more content…

At first he supported the British colonial regime’s racial segregation in South Africa and urged Indians to fight on their side during the Anglo-Boer War (also called the South African War) in 1899-1902. Gandhi came to the socio-political spotlight as a young man fighting discrimination against Indians in South Africa from 1893 to 1914. According to Mandela, Gandhi was an ideal example of a role model against anticolonial revolutionary, describing the Indian leader as a role model. Mandela was aware that Both Gandhi and he were the victims of colonial oppression, and they both were able to organize their peoples against governments that violated their rights and freedoms. In addition, Mandela indicated reasons as to why Gandhi backtracked from his initial beliefs of the British; Mandela acknowledged to what extent British brutality toward the Zulus was able to incite Gandhi’s passion against violence like no other event had. Mandela wrote later. “The sight of wounded and whipped Zulus, mercilessly abandoned by their British persecutors, so appalled him that he turned full circle from his admiration for all things British to celebrating the indigenous and ethnic”. The events from the South African War enlightened him to the plight of

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