Psst...

Do you want to get language learning tips and resources every week or two? Join our mailing list to receive new ways to improve your language learning in your inbox!

Join the list

English Script Request

toddM
Complete / 1064 Words
by Grecia 0:00 - 8:30

His story is one of the most remarkable of any world leader. Few in history have endured oppression with such little rancor or overcome the oppressor with such little blood shed.

I, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, do hereby say to be faithful to the republic of South Africa

In May 1994, Nelson Mandela, the man white South Africa had imprisoned for nearly 30 years was sworn in as the country's first black president. Through his dignified and courageous leadership, the African National Congress had broken the stranglehold of apartheid and transformed South Africa into a multiracial democracy.
Nelson Mandela was born in 1918 in South Africa's Eastern cape. He was the son of a tribal chief. He qualified as a lawyer, and by 1952 he'd set up a legal partnership with a man who was to be a lifelong friend and ally: Oliver Tambo. Together they campaigned against apartheid, the exercise in social engineering under which South Africa's white minority, in charge of the country;s military as well as economic forces, brutally crushed the human rights and aspirations of the black majority. In 1956, Mandela was among 156 political activists to be charged with high treason. The trial lasted more than four years before charges were dropped. In Johannesburg, primary city of South Africa, thousands of colored people went to attend the protest meeting called by the African National Congress.

By now black resistance to apartheid was growing. Past laws which restricted where black people could live and work became the focus of resentment. Past books were burned as Mandela and others organized demonstrations against apartheid's leaders.

I despise them. Because they are despised by the entire world. They dressed in beautiful suits, silk shirts, and silk ties (?), but they were beautiful outside and full of evil inside.

The Sharpeville massacre in 1960 forced the ANC to change strategy. 69 people died when police opened fire on black demonstrators. The ANC was outlawed, Mandela went underground, and peaceful resistance became a thing of the past.

There are many people who feel that it is useless and futile for us to continue talking peace and nonviolence against a government whose reply is only savage attacks on an unarmed and defenseless people.

Mandela undertook a campaign of sabotage against the state. He was eventually arrested and charged with conspiracy to overthrow the government. At his trial he made a three hour speech from the dock. A tape of it was discovered later. This, his final plea for freedom and democracy for all South Africans, was to echo down the 27 years he was to remain a political prisoner.

It is an ideal for which I hope to live for and to see realized. But, my lord, if it needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.

Sentenced to life imprisonment, he was sent to Robben Island, a top security prison in Cape Town's Table Bay. Photographs of Mandela were banned from publication. To quote him was an offense. But astonishingly he wasn't embittered by his long imprisonment.

We soon, uh, grasp(?) the fact we are not conducting a struggle against the individual whites. We are fighting a principle. We are fighting white domination. And in the course of that struggle, we can even form friendships with people from the other side.

Outside, time was running out for apartheid. With he ANC leadership in jail, even the children of Soweto were now helping to sustain the revolution. The hardline government of P.W. Botha tried to crush the uprising, but gradually more liberal white people began to recognize that Mandela was the solution, not the problem. An international campaign was begun for the release of Mandela as around the world governments imposed sanctions on South Africa. In 1990, a courageous white leader, president F. W. de Klerk, announced that the ANC would be unbanned. That February, after 27 years of imprisonment, Nelson Mandela walked to freedom with his then wife, Winnie, at his side. Worldwide pressure had borne fruit. But hope soon turned to despair. Township violence left blacks fighting blacks. Mandela repeatedly appealed for peace.

Take your guns, your knives, and your pangas, and throw them into the sea.

Mandela's appeal was largely ignored. Black people were massacring each other even as Mandela was negotiating a new democratic constitution. The country's first multiracial elections in 1994 resulted in a landslide victory for the ANC. Millions enjoyed their first taste of democracy. People from all races welcomed the vote as a new beginning for the country. The process of national reconciliation was held by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which gave the victims of apartheid the opportunity to tell their stories, and in some cases, to confront their oppressors.

What kind of man, listening those moans, and cries, and groans, what kind of man... is that?

It was a painful process for everyone. Yet for all his political skills, Mandela found it difficult to tackle many of South Africa's endemic social problems. Chief among them were the acute shortage of affordable housing, the widespread poverty, and the scourge of AIDS. In December 1997, Nelson Mandela gave up the presidency of the African National Congress in favor of South Africa's vice president, Thabo Mbeki, who also succeeded him as Head of State. Mandela was fated throughout the world as here in London. But the big personal(?) sadness, his long time marriage to Winnie, once known as the mother of the nation, had ended following her involvement in the kidnapping and murder of a student activist. In 1998, at the age of 80, he married Graça Machel, the widow of the late president of Mozambique. It was a marriage which brought him personal happiness, and helped him to enjoy the family life which had been denied to him by his long commitment to the struggle against apartheid. On the eve of a new millennium, Nelson Mandela had revisited the cell on Robben Island where he'd spent 18 of the 27 years he was in prison. He lit a candle to symbolize reconciliation. It was passed to an African child to represent that continent's hope for the future; a hope inspired by the life and ideals of one of the truly great leaders of our time, Nelson Mandela.

Note: Where there is (?),the audio was hard to understand, so I may have typed something wrong there.

Comments

Leave a comment

Note: this form is not for making a transcription. If you would like to transcribe this Script Request, please click the [ TRANSCRIBE ] button.

Overview

To make a new Audio Request or Script Request, click on Make a Request at the top of the page.

To record or transcribe for users learning your language, click on Help Others at the top of the page.

Recording and transcribing for other users will earn you credits and also move your own Requests ahead in the queue. This will help you get your requests recorded and/or transcribed faster.