English, asked by twinkle08148, 2 months ago

what kept Nelson Mandela and commorades going during his worst days?

ch-a long walk to freedom class 10

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Answers

Answered by muskan474941
5

Answer:

"I went for a long holiday for 27 years," Nelson Mandela once ... Mandela and his ANC comrades arrived were: "This is the ... He held her by the arm and shook his head.

Answered by bhabanisankar123
10

Answer:

I went for a long holiday for 27 years," Nelson Mandela once said of his years in prison.

It was another example of the dry, razor-sharp and often self-deprecating humour for which South Africa's first black president was famous.

The prison years ended in a cottage he had to himself in the garden of a jail near Cape Town then known as Victor Verster - with TV, radio, newspapers, a swimming pool and any visitors he wanted.

But he was still in prison. And the greatest number of years that he was in prison - 18 out of 27 - were spent on Robben Island, where the contrast could not have been greater.

Banishment

The notorious island, within sight of the city of Cape Town and Table Mountain, acquired its name from the seals that once populated it in multitudes - robben being the Dutch word for seal. Its three centuries as a prison island and a place of banishment were punctuated by a period as a leper colony

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