Biography About Nelson Mandela

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Biography About Nelson Mandela

Leadership Biography about Nelson Mandela

The first Black President of South Africa was Nelson Mandela. Opinionists’ have labeled Nelson Mandela as one of the most significant leaders of the twentieth Century as he helped end apartheid in South Africa. The country that had practiced racial discrimination was liberated and a democratic and non racial South Africa was created when he overthrew apartheid.
Chief of Mvenzo, his father died when Mandela’s was nine years old. After his father died, Mandela would listen in to the tribal meetings held by councilmen and chiefs, who had provided him with an education.   The tribal King, King Jongintaba raised Mandela and greatly influenced him. At the tribal meetings, where all the men gathered in a circle, the king would only speak when everyone had spoken. This is where Mandela learned to lead. He had been prepared to assume high office as a counselor to a chief. Lead from the back or enabling others to act is one of his eight lessons of leadership. Research has found that Mandela would gather his head men in a circle and let them speak, summarize all the thoughts methodically and make a decision. His style was not to tell people or dictate his decisions but to form a consensus.
“Apartheid” which was racial segregation rule, was instigated in South Africa in 1949, leading Mandela’s involvement in the preparation of the National Day of Protest in June 26th. A lawyer by profession, Mandela opened the first blacked owned law practice in Johannesburg in 1952, with his acquaintance Oliver Tambo. The practice was reputed for the defense of black South Africans against the brutal treatment that they received from the government, whilst protecting the rights of the African community, modeling the way for what he believed by having the same passion with the people. The interest in his practice was to defend black South Africans inspired a shared vision. Writers believe that Mandela imagined an attractive future for black...

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