Nelson Mandel The Boycott Movement

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Nelson Mandela was South African anti- apartheid revolutionary, originally known as the Boycott Movement, was a British organization that was at the Centre of the international movement opposing South Africa’s system of apartheid and supporting South Africa’s non-whites, English. Coming into office Mandela faced daunting challenges with regards to the disparity in wealth and serves between the white and black communities. Of a population of 40 million. Twenty-three million lacked electricity or adequate sanitation, twelve million lacked clean water supplies, two million children were not in school, thirteen million people were illiterate, thirty-three percent were unemployed, and twenty million lived below the poverty line.
On July 18, 1918 …show more content…

At the suggestion of one of his father’s friends, Mandela was baptized in the Methodist Church; He went on to become the first in his family to attend school. As was custom at the time, and probably due to the bias of the British educational system in South Africa, Mandela’s teacher told him that his new first name would be Nelson. When Mandela was nine years old, his father died of lung disease, causing his life to change dramatically. Mandela was given the same status and responsibilities as the regent’s two other children, his son and oldest child, Justice and daughter Nomafu. When Mandela sixteen, it was time for him to partake in the traditional African circumcision ritual to mark his entrance into manhood. In his second year at Fort Hare. Mandela was elected to the student representative council. When Mandela returned home, the regent was furious, telling him unequivocally that he would have to recant his decision and go back to school in the fall. Mandela soon became actively involved in the anti-apartheid movement, joining the African National Congress in 1942. In 1956, Mandela and 150 others were arrested and charged with treason for their political advocacy (they were eventually acquitted). It wasn’t …show more content…

In January 1962, Mandela traveled abroad illegally to attend a conference of African nationalist leaders in Ethiopia, visit the exiled Oliver Tambo in London and undergo guerilla training in Algeria. On August 5, shortly after his return, he was arrested and subsequently sentenced to five years in prison for leaving the country and inciting a 1961 workers’ strike. The following July, police raided an ANC hideout in Rivonia, a suburb on the outskirts of Johannesburg, and arrested a racially diverse group of MK leaders who had gathered to debate the merits of a guerilla insurgency. Evidence was found implicating Mandela and other activists, who were brought to stand trial for sabotage, treason and violent conspiracy alongside their

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