Former South African president's struggle and sacrifices made him one of the world's most revered statesmen.
Al Jazeera 05 Dec 2013
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Nelson Mandela was a statesman respected by world leaders and slum-dwellers alike [AFP] |
Nelson
Mandela spent a sizable part of his life incarcerated in prison, yet
retained a mass appeal that few world leaders could ever hope to match.
One of the world's most recognisable fighters against inequality and
oppression, he spent 27 years in prison for his active opposition
to South Africa's racist apartheid regime. He then rose to become the
country's first democratically elected president - a position that he
voluntarily retired from after just one term.
The seeming ease with which he made personal sacrifices, coupled with
his determined struggle for racial equality, made Mandela one of the
world's most revered statesmen. Throughout the anti-apartheid struggle
and during his years as a national leader, he maintained a commitment to
socialist values and always defended those who were oppressed. He won
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
Having lived a tumultuous life, his end came rather quietly in
his Johannesburg home aged 95, surrounded by his family, Jacob Zuma
announced on Thursday night.
Age-related illnesses finally overwhelmed the man whose second nature was to overcome mounting odds. Mandela was 95.
Life of struggle
Mandela famously spent almost three decades in prison for attempting to overthrow the apartheid government in South Africa.
Released in 1990, he went on to play a pivotal role in heralding
multiracial democracy in South Africa, becoming the country's first
black president in 1994.
He stepped down five years later, but did not immediately withdraw to the shadows.
He remained in the limelight as South Africa's highest-profile
ambassador, campaigning against the spread of HIV/AIDS and helping his
country to secure the right to host the 2010 football World Cup.
His reputation for unmatched integrity also saw him emerge as as a
towering moral arbitrator, brokering peace negotiations in the
Democratic Republic of Congo and elsewhere.
But his advancing age gradually chipped away his physical
abilities and, in 2004, at the age of 85, he retired from public life to
spend more time with his family and friends.
His public appearances became rare - his appearance at the closing
ceremony of the 2010 World Cup was one of the most recent, and
most memorable.
Personal life
Mandela was born in 1918 in a small village in the Eastern Cape of South Africa.
Born Rolihlahla Dalibhunga, a school teacher gave him his English
name, Nelson. He, however, was often called by his clan name, Madiba.
He joined the African National Congress in 1943 to resist the
apartheid system devised by the all-white National Party. He thereafter
helped to found the ANC Youth League.
The ANC was outlawed in 1960 and Mandela went underground. He was
eventually arrested and charged with seeking to overthrow the
government. He was sentenced to life in prison in 1964.
He stepped out as a free man only in 1990, after the South African
government finally succumbed to sustained global pressure - through a
campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions - to release him and
repeal apartheid.
He was elected the president four years later, as all races voted in
democratic elections for the first time in the country's history.
He was married three times, first to Evelyn Mase, a partnership which
ended in divorce in 1957. He married Winnie Madikizeia in 1958, but
divorced her in 1992 after she was convicted on charges of kidnapping
and assault. He then married Graca Machel, the widow of the former
president of Mozambique, on his 80th birthday.
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