English, asked by noufidaashraf, 7 months ago

it was this desire for the freedom of my people to live their lives with dignity and self respect that animated my life that transformed a frightened young man into a bold one that drove a law abiding attorney to become a criminal 1. when and what transformation took place in mandela? ​

Answers

Answered by skyfall63
5

It was in his early years that Mandela was aware of the freedom of all the blacks, not just his freedom. The profound understanding of the abhorrent nature of Apartheid as well as the strong desire for democracy for all its people changed him: from a terrified young man to a courageous fighter for justice, from a law-abiding lawyer to a rebel criminal.

Explanation:

  • Mandela realised his boyhood  was  an  illusion,  and when he had discovered  as  a young man that his freedom had already been taken from him, that he began to hunger (crave)for it.
  • At first, as a student,  Nelson Mandela desired  freedom  only  for  himself,  the transitory freedom of reading what he pleased, going where he chose/wanted to go, and being able to stay out at nights.  
  • Later, as a  young  man  in  Johannesburg,  Nelson Mandela wanted the simple and truthful rights to achieve his potentiality, to make his living, to marry and to have children. The freedom not be thwarted in a lawful life
  • But then he realised gradually that he was not only not free, but  his  brothers  and  sisters  were  not  free too. He saw, not only his freedom had been curtailed  but the freedom of everyone who seemed like him. Nelson Mandela entered the African National Congress (ANC) and the thirst for democracy was the biggest desire for the freedom of my country. That was when he entered the African National Congress.
  • It was this desire for his people's rights to live their lives with integrity and fairness that inspired Mandela's life and transformed the terrified young man into an audacious man that led  to a law-abiding  attorney  to  become  a  criminal, turned a husband who loved family into a man without a home, compelled him to live like a monk
  • Mandela discovered out he couldn't even appreciate the restricted and poor freedoms that he was given because he learned his people weren't safe. Freedom is indivisible. The chains of his people chains were  the  chains  on  all  of  them including him.
  • Nelson Mandela understood the oppressor would be almost as definitely freed as the oppressed. A person who takes  away freedom from another man is a prisoner of hate; he's stuck behind bars of narrow-mindedness and prejudice. He felt that he was not very liberated if he had taken away the rights of someone else, just as certainly when his rights is stripped from him, he is not free.

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why was nelson mandela sentenced to life imprisonment in 1964 ...

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Answered by kumarshubhankar03
2

Answer:

It was in his early years that Mandela was aware of the freedom of all the blacks, not just his freedom. The profound understanding of the abhorrent nature of Apartheid as well as the strong desire for democracy for all its people changed him: from a terrified young man to a courageous fighter for justice, from a law-abiding lawyer to a rebel criminal.

Explanation:

Mandela realised his boyhood  was  an  illusion,  and when he had discovered  as  a young man that his freedom had already been taken from him, that he began to hunger (crave)for it.

At first, as a student,  Nelson Mandela desired  freedom  only  for  himself,  the transitory freedom of reading what he pleased, going where he chose/wanted to go, and being able to stay out at nights.  

Later, as a  young  man  in  Johannesburg,  Nelson Mandela wanted the simple and truthful rights to achieve his potentiality, to make his living, to marry and to have children. The freedom not be thwarted in a lawful life

But then he realised gradually that he was not only not free, but  his  brothers  and  sisters  were  not  free too. He saw, not only his freedom had been curtailed  but the freedom of everyone who seemed like him. Nelson Mandela entered the African National Congress (ANC) and the thirst for democracy was the biggest desire for the freedom of my country. That was when he entered the African National Congress.

It was this desire for his people's rights to live their lives with integrity and fairness that inspired Mandela's life and transformed the terrified young man into an audacious man that led  to a law-abiding  attorney  to  become  a  criminal, turned a husband who loved family into a man without a home, compelled him to live like a monk

Mandela discovered out he couldn't even appreciate the restricted and poor freedoms that he was given because he learned his people weren't safe. Freedom is indivisible. The chains of his people chains were  the  chains  on  all  of  them including him.

Nelson Mandela understood the oppressor would be almost as definitely freed as the oppressed. A person who takes  away freedom from another man is a prisoner of hate; he's stuck behind bars of narrow-mindedness and prejudice. He felt that he was not very liberated if he had taken away the rights of someone else, just as certainly when his rights is stripped from him, he is not free.

Explanation:

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