B-HIVE Annual Issue | Page 14

TRIBUTE TO MADIBA Mandela was born on July 18, 1918, in the Transkei, South Africa. In his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, he recalled his childhood as a simple, joyful time. Tapping into the culture of black resistance, Mandela helped organize demonstrations against the country's system of racial segregation. ”It is an idea for which I hope to live for and to see realized but my Lord, if it needs be, it is an idea for which I am prepared to die," Mandela said, when he went on trial for sabotage in 1963. He escaped the gallows but was sentenced to life in prison. He would spend the next 27 years behind bars. In prison he became a symbol of the anti-apartheid movement and the focal point of international campaigns to do away with racial segregation in South Africa. South African President F.W. de Klerk made several offers to free him but Mandela would accept only an unconditional release. In 1990, de Klerk did just that. The four years between Mandela's release from prison and South Africa's first democratic elections in 1994 were tumultuous but Mandela's paternal, grandfatherly presence had a calming effect across the country. In 1993, he and de Klerk shared the Nobel Peace Prize. After winning the 1994 election, Mandela reached out to South Africans of all races to help build an equitable and prosperous country. Possibly his greatest political move was his decision to serve only one term as president. This was partly because he was 80, but also because he said he wanted to establish a tradition of contested, democratic elections. He is regarded as the saviour of the country.