Nelson Mandela International Day: A Celebration of Service and ForgivenessJuly 18th is the day when the whole world stops to remember a man who turned a prison cell into a pulpit and hate into dialogue. Nelson Mandela International Day is not just a tribute to a great politician. It is a call to action, a reminder that each of us is capable of changing the world for the better. And it doesn't require being a president or a Nobel laureate — all it takes is to extend a hand to someone in need.A Man Who Defeated Apartheid: Nelson Mandela's JourneyNelson Rolihlahla Mandela was born on July 18, 1918, in the small village of Mvezo in the Eastern Cape of South Africa. He came from the Xhosa people, the junior branch of the Tembu dynasty that ruled the region of Transkei. At birth, he was named Rolihlahla, which means \"troublemaker\" or \"one who brings trouble\" in Xhosa. His teacher at school gave him the name Nelson in honor of the British admiral Horatio Nelson. This name turned out to be prophetic: Mandela indeed became the \"troublemaker\" of the apartheid regime, but at the same time remained a symbol of honor and fortitude.In 1943, Mandela joined the African National Congress (ANC). Initially, he was an ordinary activist, but quickly showed himself as a talented organizer and created the Youth League of the ANC. Back then, South Africa was a country where skin color determined everything: where you could live, study, work, and even walk on the streets. Apartheid — the system of racial segregation — had been elevated to the status of state policy. Mandela consistently advocated for the rights of black South Africans to equal access to all the blessings of their country and maintained an unwavering position against this regime.For his struggle, he paid the highest price — 27 years of imprisonment. He spent them in a cell on Robben Island, where prisoners were forced to extract stone from limestone quarries. But even there, behind barbed wire, he remained a leader: he ...
Read more