English, asked by dahiyagourav222, 10 months ago

why did mandela fight for freedom? what were his views about freedom, oppressor and the oppressed
8 marks question​

Answers

Answered by archiehotwani1238
7

Answer:

mandela thought that he is not the only one who wanted freedom but his own country and his family also wanted freedom.in childhood,freedom meant to him the freedom to run in the fields near his mother's hut. it meant to swim in the clear street and ran to his spirit as a student.

Mandela does not think of oppressor as been free. he says That the oppressor is a prisoner of hatred and is locked behind the bars of prejudice and narrow mindedness.

mark as brainliest....

Answered by kaderoz9539
4

Answer:

People of South Africa were under the control of the policies of the apartheid system for ages.

when Mandela became the president he liberalised the people of South Africa from the

Crucial measures of South Africa. He was the president of South Africa first democratic non racial government.

In his childhood Mandela was born with a hunger to be free. Free to run in the fields,free to swim etc.

But he slowly realised that not only his freedom was curtailed,but his brothers and sisters were not also free. That is when he joined the African National Congress and that is when the hunger for his own freedom became the hunger for the freedom of his people.

Oppressor must be liberated just as surely as the oppressed. "A man who takes away another man's freedom is a prisoner of hatred. He is locked behind the bars of prejudice and narrow mindedness. the oppressed and the oppressor alike are robbed of their humanity."

MARK AS BRAINLIEST!!

Similar questions