they were both great leaders and liberated people from slavery. Nelson for the blacks and Moses for the hebrews what great men! :)
nelson Mandela born in 18 July 1918
You can't. He's dead.
no he got out and became president of south africa.
Nalson Mandela had gone to several jails but the longest period of time in jail was at the jail for mentally, thieves,and political prisoners in Robben Island
nelson Mandela speech was i dunno maybe 2015 coz dat is wot i tink bcoz yh bye xx babe did u getdat!!
John Nalson died in 1686.
John Nalson was born in 1638.
John S. Nalson has written: 'Irrigation on the Gascoyne River' -- subject(s): Irrigation
The South African National Party caused and started apartheid.
Nalson Mondela
Nelson Mandela, born 18 July 1918, was South Africa's eleventh president and its first democratically elected president. Before his election to the presidency, Nelson Mandela protested against apartheid by leading the African National Congress (ANC). He was jailed for 27 years on a charge of sabotage for his work with the ANC. The apartheid government deemed him a terrorist at the same time he was becoming a hero to anti-apartheid groups. Nelson Mandela was seen internationally as being responsible for helping to end apartheid. In 1993, three years after his freedom from the confines of jail, Nelson Mandela was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. South Africans call Nelson Mandela either "mkhulu" which means grandfather, or Madiba, the Mandela family name for a respected elder. Nelson Mandela was given his first name by a school teacher who had trouble saying his actual first name, Rolihlahla. She called him "Nelson" after Horatio Nelson, the British admiral. Mandela was seven years old when he started school and was the first one in his family to go to school.Ads by Google
John Nalson has written: 'The true liberty & dominion of conscience vindicated, from the usurpations & abuses of opinion, and persuasion' -- subject(s): Conscience, Dissenters, Religious, Liberty of conscience, Religious Dissenters 'An essay upon the change of manners' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Popish Plot, 1678 'The present interest of England; or, a confutation of the Whiggish conspirators anti-monyan principle' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, History, Whig Party (Great Britain) 'Vox populi, fax populi, or, A discovery of an impudent cheat and forgery put upon the people of England by Elephant Smith, and his author of Vox populi' -- subject(s): Politics and government 'An impartial collection of the great affairs of state' -- subject(s): History, Sources, Stuart 'A letter from a Jesuit at Paris, to his correspondent in London' -- subject(s): Church and state, Early works to 1800 'The common interest of king and people' -- subject(s): Monarchy, Constitutional history, Early works to 1800 'Foxes and fire-brands' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Controversial literature, Protestant authors 'The true liberty & dominion of conscience vindicated' -- subject(s): Church of England, Conscience, Doctrinal and controversial works, Early works to 1800