Task 1
Why is Nelson Mandela a role model for so many people in the world?
Nelson Mandela decided already as a young man to take part in the freedom struggle for his people as a lawyer. He was a black man who had political opinions and lived in a country with non-coloured regime. You may see that he wasn’t much liked by the apartheid regime. He was imprisoned for 27 years of his life but that couldn’t break him. He only grew stronger. The regime fought the majority of South Africa with power, but Nelson Mandela fought with words. If that isn’t a good role model, then who is? Who do you look to as a similar role model and why?
I look to Martin Luther King as a similar role model. That is because he fought for anti-segregation and equal rights
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Many have big dreams about making big changes in the world. We want to help and we want to matter. Often these dreams don’t go anywhere. They are too big, take long time and much energy. Often dreams stay just as dreams and maybe you even forget them too. You watch TV and suddenly some poor and hungry children that live somewhere in Africa appears and you think “Oh I wish I could do something”. Nowadays there are some things that we can do to help. We can donate money and we send old clothes that we don’t use anymore. These small things for us are a huge difference for them. A normal meal for us may be the same for them as food for a whole month or so. “Do what your heart says and follow your dream” is a common saying. “It’s easier said than done” is also a saying and in this case they fit well together. It’s not always easy to follow your dream or what your heart says. But the dream you follow don’t have to be the biggest and hardest one. Maybe you have a smaller and easier dream you can choose that also makes a change. Sometimes people think “I have to do that” not because they want to but because they feel that they have to. Not everything you do have to be for others benefit, it’s important to do things that makes you happy and you want to do. Also what you do can make other happy even if it’s just for yourself because sometimes that you are happy, makes them
In response to the recent failure of the international community to prevent the famine crisis in the Horn of Africa since July 2011, Suzanne Dvorak the chief executive of Save the Children wrote that, “We need to provide help now. But we cannot forget that these children are wasting away in a disaster that we could - and should - have prevented” she added, “The UN estimates that every $1 spent in prevention saves $7 in emergency spending.” (Dvorak, 2011).
Martin Luther King Jr and Rosa Parks are two examples of a historical heroes. According to Biography.com, “Through his activism and inspirational speeches he played a pivotal role in ending the legal segregation of African-American citizens in the United States, as well as the creation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.” In other words, King did not sit all day and watch African-Americans get treated unequally, due to the color of their skin. He took action and stood up for what he believed in. This took a great deal of courage and determination because, people involved in these peaceful protests, suffered from violence and harassment. Additionally, Rosa Parks is a prime example of a hero who not once lacked
"Jump up and catch a kungry...It's what little boys eat when they are hungry." Helping kids and their family would help parents get their child's mind off hunger and explaining to their kids that they can't get any food for them under their circumstance. If we could help children across the world even a little bit, we could possibly have a decline in poverty. It may be slow, yet, we could minimize poverty greatly if all of us had just a little bit bigger heart. Even if you give a child in poverty your loose change, that could be everything for them. A little kindness can go a long
Nelson Mandela was a role model, he went to jail for 27 years because he stood up to Government against african rights in africa. Even after being let loose from jail he continued his journey standing up for his rights,then later showed that he could be president and he did he won the election he was president from 1990 to 1994. In 2013 when he passed even though he is not here today his legacy still will live on. This is why I choose elson Mandela for my
Throughout the history of the humanity, there were many events happened that show of the courage of many people. After the story “ Unbroken” that tells us about Louis Zamperini and his story , we can see that he is an example of a courage person, beside that, Nelson Mandela is another examples of this characteristic. Nelson was the democratic leader that fought for justice and freedom in South Africa, he spend over 20 years in prison for the apartheid regime. But with his courage and smartness, he won against the racism and became the leader of the new South Africa. And In 1993, he received a Nobel Peace Prize for all that he did and contributed for the humanity.
“To deny people their right to human rights is to challenge their very humanity. To impose on them a wretched life of hunger and deprivation is to dehumanize them. But such has been the terrible fate of all black persons in our country under the system of apartheid (“In Nelson Mandela’s own words”). Nelson Mandela was a moral compass symbolizing the struggle against racial oppression. Nelson Mandela emerged from prison after twenty-seven years to lead his country to justice. For twenty-seven years he sat in a cell because he believed in a country without apartheid, a country with freedom and human rights. He fought for a country where all people were equal, treated with respect and given equal opportunity. Nelson Mandela looms large in the
Another person I could think of is Rosa Parks. She was the black woman who would not give up her spot to a white man on a bus. If she had never made the courageous decision to break the corrupt law, then it is quite possible that blacks could still have no rights in today's society do you think that would be right? If you just think about how millions of people in our own country were oppressed and abused by the justice system of this great nation. Now think about how without courage it would still be like that. MLK, Rosa Parks, The Freedom Riders, and many other civil rights leaders would never have made it without
This is where Dr. Martin Luther King Junior enters the picture. He preached love and hope. He came into the world and worked for a better one. He hoped that in the future that his children would be judged upon the content of their character and not by the color of their skin. Through his preaching and his peaceful protests, he was able to change many minds and get rights for African-Americans. Tragically, his efforts cost him his life.
Whether it be lack of food, clean water, healthcare, or even a home, I feel that each and every one of us should do our part to aid these people. I am incredibly blessed and fortunate to have been born into a happy home in the United States. I have never experienced life without the bare essentials, but a study done by the United Nations Development Programme in 2015 says that over half of the world’s population currently lives on less than $2.50/day. While these statistics are shocking, I don’t feel hopeless. I know that each and every one of us are human.
The life story of Nelson Mandela has long become a legend, a story that transcends race, borders, culture, or language. He is one of the greatest leaders to ever step foot on this Earth. He was willing to give up his own personal freedoms for the good of his people. Still, his decisions at major points in his lifetime hold lessons for individuals who are inspired of becoming good leaders. Many leaders are inspired by the actions and decision-makings abilities of Mandela. He kept the interest of others before his own. This is what made Nelson Mandela a great leader, and worthy of winning a Nobel Prize. From the decisions he made, and his life experiences while fighting for human rights, one can conclude that Mandela is truly
Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the many historical, impacting men who stood above a large crowd giving his compelling, determined, well-spoken lecture to our nation. Rosa Park stood up to the caucasian on a bus by not giving up her seat just because of the pigmentation of her skin. She is a human, living being just like the rest of us! Abraham Lincoln prohibited slavery by giving a sermon about slavery, and many citizens had voted for wanting slavery to be dispersed; he won the fight without that much violence although he met a devastating end. One of the most recent role models of our century is Malala Yousafzai, she spoke out to rebel against her country where women weren’t treated as an equal and education was not available to them; although she was shot, she survived to bring up the concern of individuals getting their education despite their gender.
This paper explores the four frames of leadership described by Bolman and Deal (2013) through the analysis of Nelson Mandela’s Leadership. Mandela is known as a great leader but when this paper explores is how he got to be, what happened in his life that developed him into such a great leader. This paper will explain his leadership in each frame one by one.
Nelson Mandela was the man who abolished Apartheid, freeing South Africa from the binds of racial segregation forever. However, it was not an easy road and Mandela needed patience, strength of character, focus, passion, understanding, perseverance, and most importantly, forgiveness, to achieve this. For more than forty years, black South Africans were subject to the harsh racial segregation of the Apartheid system; despite making up over 70% of South Africa’s population, they had little to no rights.
Imagine being systematically oppressed from the moment you exited the womb. All your civil rights, based on the amount of melanin in your skin. Drinking from the wrong water fountain, could even get you thrown into jail. Coincidently; this was the life, of black South Africans from the moment of Dutch colonization in 1652, to the first true democratic election in 1994. Apartheid, meaning “separateness” in Afrikaans; was legal segregation enforced by The National Party (NP) from 1948 to 1994. It legally imposed preexisting policies of racial discrimination on the Majority of the South African population. The entire basis of the racist policies, was the darker your complexion the less legal rights you had. Presumably this injustice, could have continued much longer if it weren’t for all involved in the fight against the NP, however the man who arguably contributed the most, was Nelson Mandela. He ended an apartheid, with both his philanthropy and political prowess. He united a nation that used to be segregated; which seemed a daunting task at the time, but through the sweat and bloodshed he achieved the impossible. This alone exhibited his heroic characteristics, but to be more precise: both his actions and inactions lead to his success. Furthermore, Mandela was both a strong leader and forgiving at the same-time. Being in the forefront of the abolishment movement, was an extremely risky move during the apartheid. He risked his life for what he believed in, and this personal
Nelson Mandela had run his trip to freedom, healed the people and his country to the best of his ability. The pain he went through to get to such a high position in the world was not a movie it was reality. He didn’t stop there, he pushed on harder and set the base for other leaders to follow his steps and never let the fire that he had started, to burn out.