![]() ![]() ![]() Perhaps the most powerful passages involve the Robben Island prison, where political prisoners formed a ``university'' and Mandela read books like War and Peace, resisting embitterment and finding decency even in callous Afrikaner jailers. As an African National Congress leader, this military novice helped launch an armed struggle against the intransigent apartheid government, then eloquently explained his political convictions when on trial in 1964 for sabotage. He has fleshed out a sweeping story that begins in the rural Transkei in 1918 and moves beyond, especially to Johannesburg, where he became politically active as one of only a few black African lawyers. ![]() Mandela began this book in 1975, during his 27-year imprisonment. This fluid memoir matches South African President Mandela's stately grace with wise reflection on his life and the freedom struggle that defined it. ![]()
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