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As the world's most famous prisoner
and, now, his country's leader, he exemplifies a moral integrity that
shines far beyond South Africa.
In a recent television broadcast BBC commentator Brian Walden
argued that Nelson Mandela, "perhaps the most generally admired figure of
our age, falls short of the giants of the past." Mandela himself argues
that "I was not a messiah, but an ordinary man who had become a leader
because of extraordinary circumstances." Clearly, a changing world demands
redefinition of old concepts.
In the revolution led by Mandela to transform a model of racial
division and oppression into an open democracy, he demonstrated that he
didn't flinch from taking up arms, but his real qualities came to the fore
after his time as an activist — during his 27 years in prison and in the
eight years since his release, when he had to negotiate the challenge of
turning a myth into a man.
Rolihlahla Mandela was born deep in the black homeland of Transkei on
July 18, 1918. His first name could be interpreted, prophetically, as
"troublemaker." The Nelson was added later, by a primary school teacher
with delusions of imperial splendor.
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