68th out of 136 books
—
56 voters
Long Walk to Freedom
Read by Danny Glover, with an introduction by Kofi Annan.
Nelson Mandela is one of the great moral and political leaders of our time: an international hero whose lifelong dedication to the fight against racial oppression in South Africa won him the Nobel Peace Prize and the presidency of his country. Since his triumphant release in 1990 from more than a quarter-century of...more
Nelson Mandela is one of the great moral and political leaders of our time: an international hero whose lifelong dedication to the fight against racial oppression in South Africa won him the Nobel Peace Prize and the presidency of his country. Since his triumphant release in 1990 from more than a quarter-century of...more
Paperback, 768 pages
Published
1995
by Abacus
(first published June 1st 1990)
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If you are not a prolific reader, the size and weight of this volume (aside from e-readers, LOL) may look daunting. After reading the first two or three chapters, you will be tempted to give up. DON'T!!! It's just about to get really good.
This autobiography chronicles Mandela's life, first as the son of a tribal chief, then as an educated Black man under apartheid (a dangerous thing to be), then the journey, both outward and inward, from attorney to the leader of a revolution. You will read abou...more
This autobiography chronicles Mandela's life, first as the son of a tribal chief, then as an educated Black man under apartheid (a dangerous thing to be), then the journey, both outward and inward, from attorney to the leader of a revolution. You will read abou...more
(إنني في قرارة نفسي إنسان متفائل, وإن كنت لا أدري إن كان ذلك في طبيعتي أم في طبعي, ومن علامات التفاؤل أن يحافظ المرء على رأسه مرفوعا نحو السماء, وأن تكون خطاه متجهة إلى الأمام, لقد مرت بي لحظات عديدة اهتزت خلالها ثقتي بالإنسانية, ولكنني لم ولن أستسلم لليأس فذلك هو السبيل إلى الإخفاق والموت المحقق). اعتقد قناعات هذا الرجل و ايمانه بفكرته كان مصدر قوته الحقيقى و لا يسعنى الا ان اقول كم انت عظيم يا مانديلا و قد صار كتابك هذا صديقى للابد
من أحلى كتب السير الذاتية التي قرأتها، وأكثرها صلة بنضالنا في العالم العربي من أجل الحرية والديمقراطية. تبدأ مع طفولة المتناضل الأفريقي الأشهر نيلسون مانديلا، وتنتهي بتوليه الرئاسة في بلده، لكن نهاية الكتاب هي في الحقيقية بداية، فهي وعد باستكمال طريق النضال الطويل نحو الحرية..
لن أتحدث طويلا عن الكتاب، لكني سأنقل بعض العبارات والمقاطع منه التي أراها الاهم، أو الأشد صلة بواقعنا العربي، أو -وهو الأغلب- المقاطع التي تحمل افكارا استغربت أن تصدر عن مناضل مثله، وعلى سبيل المثال خلافه مع بعض من قادة "ال...more
لن أتحدث طويلا عن الكتاب، لكني سأنقل بعض العبارات والمقاطع منه التي أراها الاهم، أو الأشد صلة بواقعنا العربي، أو -وهو الأغلب- المقاطع التي تحمل افكارا استغربت أن تصدر عن مناضل مثله، وعلى سبيل المثال خلافه مع بعض من قادة "ال...more
تستهويني جداً كتب السيرة الذاتية .. .. وعندما تكون هذه السيرة لشخصية نضالية كنيلسون مانديلا فأعلم أنك ستخوض تجربة فكرية غزيرة و استثنائية لرجل تحوَّل وتطور من كونه ولداً أسوداً يعيش في كوخ في قرية نائية إلى أن أصبح أول رئيس أسود لجنوب أفريقيا منهياً بذلك حقبة التمييز العنصري هناك
تنبيه:- الريفيو تخليص لما جاء في الكتاب ولذلك فهو ليس موَّجه لمحبي المراجعات القصيرة
قام ملك التيمبو بتنصيب "غادلا هنري مفاكانيسوا" زعيماً على قبيلة مفيتزو وتسمى عشائر هذه القبيلة بالكوسا، وزعيم هذه القبيلة تزوج من أربعة...more
تنبيه:- الريفيو تخليص لما جاء في الكتاب ولذلك فهو ليس موَّجه لمحبي المراجعات القصيرة
قام ملك التيمبو بتنصيب "غادلا هنري مفاكانيسوا" زعيماً على قبيلة مفيتزو وتسمى عشائر هذه القبيلة بالكوسا، وزعيم هذه القبيلة تزوج من أربعة...more
هي قصة نضال تصلح مثلا لكل شعوب الارض المظلومة التي تبحث وسط ظلام القهر عن الحرية . قصة تروي مسيرة نضال طويلة من الكوخ الى قصر الرءاسة ومن الجهل المفروض على السود في وطنهم الى المحاماة عرف خلالها مانديلا النضال بكل أشكاله السلمي والمسلحين والعصيان المدني والمظاهرات ودخول السجن للفت الأنظار الى قضيته . كان صاحب فكرة النضال المسلح وكان اول من تدرب على استعمال السلاح في اثيوبيا . لكن اعتقاله المبكر اثر بشكل كبير على مخططاته النضالية. اما السجن الذي استمر ٢٧ عاما فكان قاسيا بكل ما تعنيه الكلمة لكنه و...more
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I bought this book in January and didn't get around to reading it until March. I was at a Goodwill 50% off sale the day I got this and as soon as I saw it I knew I had to have it.
As someone who has strong roots in South Africa but has never been there I am always eager to learn more about the country my father and his family were born in particularly because my father and his family left South Africa in the 40's to escape the apartheid even though they were "coloured" and not "black" it still im...more
As someone who has strong roots in South Africa but has never been there I am always eager to learn more about the country my father and his family were born in particularly because my father and his family left South Africa in the 40's to escape the apartheid even though they were "coloured" and not "black" it still im...more
Nov 01, 2007
Sarah
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
look-ma-its-educational
It was an interesting read. Sorry, that's a bit of an understatement and the dry tone in my head doesn't really translate. Mandela is a good, clear writer, but not creative or inventive. One can see the methodical planning that made him such an effective political leader and innovator, but as the author of a 625 page book, his style is a little stiff. The first half of the book is about his upbringing and path into politics. The problem I was having was that there was no way to tell from his for...more
What do I really have to say? :-) I read this before the first time I went to South Africa and fell in love with the country...hence two return trips! I had some amazing experiences during the pr days and one was a private tour of Robben Island with Ahmed Kathrada while in SA. He was imprisoned with and a close friend of Mandela's (one of eight sentenced to life imprisonment during the Rivonia Trial). Anyway, obviously it was amazing since he knew EVERYTHING about the time and place (he was ther...more
May 27, 2008
Laura
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
travelers, organizers, aspiring world changers
Recommended to Laura by:
a guy on my flight home from j'burg
I learned (as if I didn't already know) that I am one slack m*^&rf&*ker, and this is the perfect book to read if you need some motivation to get off your ass and/or get over yourself.
There are also a lot of fascinating things about his story that i didn't know -he grew up literally barefoot in the bush, bailed on being a tribal councilor and ran away from home, and a lot of interesting ins and outs of how african consciousness developed in SA the 60s and 70s, plus tips on how to keep yo...more
There are also a lot of fascinating things about his story that i didn't know -he grew up literally barefoot in the bush, bailed on being a tribal councilor and ran away from home, and a lot of interesting ins and outs of how african consciousness developed in SA the 60s and 70s, plus tips on how to keep yo...more
First of all let me say that Nelson Mandela is an amazing man who has been through more trials than I could ever imagine, and he faced them with such class and strength. I am glad I know more about his history and his life as a "freedom fighter," and this book gave me greater appreciation for black South Africans. However, it was a long, long, long, long walk to freedom. I guess I like books that are written in story form, which shows some lack of intelligence on my part, unfortunately. It took...more
I read the illustrated version of Mandela’s autobiography. Growing up among his village tribe, a series of fortunate turns moved Mandela to city life at Johannesburg. Here he confronted the discrimination of ‘apartheid’ and gradually a law-abiding, family man and an attorney turned into a militant, an activist and a forced ‘monk’.
The story of Mandela’s life is one of amazing struggle, privation, incarceration for three decades and, above all, forgiveness and reconciliation. His stay in prison to...more
The story of Mandela’s life is one of amazing struggle, privation, incarceration for three decades and, above all, forgiveness and reconciliation. His stay in prison to...more
RESOLUTE ADHERENCE TO PRINCIPLE
“To humiliate another person is to make him suffer an unnecessary cruel fate. Even as a boy, I defeated my opponents without dishonoring them.”
“A Leader is like a shepherd. He stays behind the flock, letting the most nimble go out ahead, whereupon the others follow, not realizing that all along they are being directed from behind.”
“The goal that marks the reign of all great leaders: Keep your people united. Liberals and conservatives, traditionalists…all remained l...more
“To humiliate another person is to make him suffer an unnecessary cruel fate. Even as a boy, I defeated my opponents without dishonoring them.”
“A Leader is like a shepherd. He stays behind the flock, letting the most nimble go out ahead, whereupon the others follow, not realizing that all along they are being directed from behind.”
“The goal that marks the reign of all great leaders: Keep your people united. Liberals and conservatives, traditionalists…all remained l...more
This book is exceptionally thought provoking. The world is such a messy place, and we are all obligated to do what is right amid all that mess. It is, unfortunately, so rarely clear to me what the right thing to do is, and Nelson Mandela's life seems to be one where he felt his way through the cloudy ambiguity with amazing skill, so as to come through the mess not untouched or unsullied, but clearly having made things better in the world. Sometimes it is the right thing to fight against injustic...more
Jan 27, 2013
Julie
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
biography-autobiography,
favorites
If we do nothing else for those who suffer for a cause, we must at least bear witness and say, I have seen, and understood.
Many people the world over have waxed prolific and poetic on this book, and all that is left to say is, it is a must-read for anyone who cares about anything at all in this world. This struggle cannot be dismissed as a partisan "engagement". It is not just about apartheid; it is not about fighting a harsh regime; it is not about man's inhumanity to man -- and all that "stuf...more
Many people the world over have waxed prolific and poetic on this book, and all that is left to say is, it is a must-read for anyone who cares about anything at all in this world. This struggle cannot be dismissed as a partisan "engagement". It is not just about apartheid; it is not about fighting a harsh regime; it is not about man's inhumanity to man -- and all that "stuf...more
Jan 14, 2013
Amanda Brinkmann
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
classics-reads
I tried reading this book SO many times right after it was published - but found myself so upset and saddened, that I realised I was simply not emotionally ready to deal with the contents. So - it sat on my shelf for nearly 10 years, before I felt ready and healed enough to pick the book up again.
It was, for me, a riveting read. I sobbed my way through a great many of the sections, I learned so much about the history of my country and the genesis of the African National Congress and its original...more
It was, for me, a riveting read. I sobbed my way through a great many of the sections, I learned so much about the history of my country and the genesis of the African National Congress and its original...more
I absolutely loved this book. The style and tone is one of a carefully kept journal or a detailed conversation with a very close friend. Some other readers have indicated a dislike for the seemingly irrelevant details Mandela includes, but I found this trait particularly appealing. As a sociologist, I'm always looking for 'what is not said'. This includes the things that people notice or infer from a situation, not just the facts as they happened. What develops as a result of Mandela's repeated...more
At over 700 pages, Nelson Mandela's autobiography might look like a serious commitment. Actually though, it doesn't feel like a heavy book at all. Like the thinking which informs it, the writing is clear, measured and straightforward, albeit scattered with bits of Harvard English that are presumably down to Mandela's (uncredited) American ghostwriter, Richard Stengel.
I sped through it in under a week, thanks mainly to a couple of long train journeys. I'm left with a much more nuanced view of Man...more
I sped through it in under a week, thanks mainly to a couple of long train journeys. I'm left with a much more nuanced view of Man...more
Astonishing. The man, the story, the book. I recognize that the author may be biased, that there may be perspectives we're not getting... but even so this is a remarkable and memorable work. A remarkable man and life.
First, admittedly, because of the context: to those of us who grew up with First Fourth Fifth Eighth Amendment protections, it is chilling to read of the brutality of the South African government. It's even worse to note how calmly and matter-of-factly Mandela speaks of being "banne...more
First, admittedly, because of the context: to those of us who grew up with First Fourth Fifth Eighth Amendment protections, it is chilling to read of the brutality of the South African government. It's even worse to note how calmly and matter-of-factly Mandela speaks of being "banne...more
This was written by Mandela just after his 1994 freedom from about 25 years in South African prisons. It is his auto biography, and it is very good.
I recently went to South Africa and was advised to read it while going there. I did. Terrific advice. It is so much more of a meaningful book to read it just before or during a trip to South Africa. Once in S.A. there is no escaping what a rock star, god, hero, and leader Mandela was and is. Streets are named after him, malls named after him. Museum...more
I recently went to South Africa and was advised to read it while going there. I did. Terrific advice. It is so much more of a meaningful book to read it just before or during a trip to South Africa. Once in S.A. there is no escaping what a rock star, god, hero, and leader Mandela was and is. Streets are named after him, malls named after him. Museum...more
I gave this book five stars because it is an excellent read. My version, which was split into two ~500 page paperback books, had almost a thousand pages but it didn't feel anywhere near that long. It provides an excellent account of the birth and growth of his political thought and life, as well as an account of his long imprisonment and rise to President of South Africa. And it has enough of the history and background to educate the reader about the general situation as well. You don't need to...more
I read this opening half of the great Mandela opus while on my first visit to South Africa recently. I'm glad I did. So much of it makes sense only once you have spent a short while in the country.
In some ways, this is not the book I was expecting. It's not really a firebrand of a book, no revolutionary manifesto, call to arms or heady political diatribe. There's no need for that, we're on the moral high ground here. Instead, this first book is a steady, level-headed account of Mandela's upbrin...more
In some ways, this is not the book I was expecting. It's not really a firebrand of a book, no revolutionary manifesto, call to arms or heady political diatribe. There's no need for that, we're on the moral high ground here. Instead, this first book is a steady, level-headed account of Mandela's upbrin...more
While this book is very enjoyable and informative and a fascinating story all on its own, I'd need a timeline of South African history, along with a little more literature to able to fully understand and appreciate all that's going on. I'd also need to take a few notes, just on the interesting little things that come up (at the moment nothing much comes to mind, but they are there).
It's a book that made me angry at times— the whites who came into Africa, are, at the time of writing, outnumbered...more
It's a book that made me angry at times— the whites who came into Africa, are, at the time of writing, outnumbered...more
I've just finished this magisterial autobiography. Now I wish I would have read it when it was published in the 1990s--and certainly before I visited South Africa to speak twelve years ago. The Boston Globe suggested that this book should be read by every person alive, and I certainly concur. In my own lifetime of reading, I cannot recall a more important book or a more humane, compassionate book that tells us more about servant leadership and the human spirit. I do have a couple of qualms. I wi...more
Definitely a very inspiring story.
It's quite interesting how much faith he had in humanity after all he had been though.
It is great that (specially in light of current political situations) he continuously appealed to the higher virtues of the people (promoting egalitarian beliefs in his campaign), at a time when inciting African nationalism would have been a more politically popular move.
For political leaders, I think it's always easy (and more politically advantageous) to segregate a commun...more
It's quite interesting how much faith he had in humanity after all he had been though.
It is great that (specially in light of current political situations) he continuously appealed to the higher virtues of the people (promoting egalitarian beliefs in his campaign), at a time when inciting African nationalism would have been a more politically popular move.
For political leaders, I think it's always easy (and more politically advantageous) to segregate a commun...more
"Wow" best sums up my thoughts after finishing this long but very moving, very captivating story of Nelson Mandela (Madiba), from his early days in rural South Africa to his taking the reins of a nation newly freed from apartheid. I get the impression of a very intelligent, pragmatic man who is willing to listen to others opinions, even if he doesn't agree with him. His story is told very well, and is easy to follow. I learned a lot about Mandela and South Africa from his autobiography, and it m...more
Dec 11, 2011
Matthew Hunter
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
biography-memoir,
favorites
As a student at Duke University Divinity School in the early 00's, I had the privilege of studying under Bishop Peter Storey, former General Secretary of the South African Council of Churches (pre-Tutu) and staffer of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. He chose Archbishop Tutu to lead the TRC. In mid 2003, Bishop Storey took me to Cape Town, South Africa for three months where I worked with Burundian and Congolese refugees in connection with Woodstock Methodist Church. This experience work...more
As I closed this book, I felt awe for this man Mandela. Volume 2 takes the reader through the famous Rivonia trial, through 27 years of trials in prison, and through years of negotiation with the apartheid enforcers to culminate in a new and hopeful beginning as president of South Africa.
How he avoided cynicism and despair by seeking the good in everyone and clinging to hope even in dark times was inspiring. How he was able to negotiate with the apartheid rulers with persistence and willingness...more
How he avoided cynicism and despair by seeking the good in everyone and clinging to hope even in dark times was inspiring. How he was able to negotiate with the apartheid rulers with persistence and willingness...more
Oct 27, 2011
Kathleen Hagen
added it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
2011-audio-books,
2011-nonfiction
I read an audio edition produced by Hachtte audio not listed among the 57 editions listed. Long Walk to Freedom, by Nelson Mandela, Narrated by Michael Boatman, Produced by Hachette hettehettehette Audio, Downloaded from audible.com.
This is a partial autobiography of Mandela’s life-partial because it ends with his election as president after his release from prison, and much has happened since that time, almost 20 years ago now. Mandela served over 27 years in prison in South Africa because of h...more
This is a partial autobiography of Mandela’s life-partial because it ends with his election as president after his release from prison, and much has happened since that time, almost 20 years ago now. Mandela served over 27 years in prison in South Africa because of h...more
I read Long Walk to Freedom while staying at the Botha House, a beautiful bed and breakfast overlooking the Indian Ocean in South Africa. P.W. Botha was President of South Africa near the end of apartheid and is credited with allowing access to the incarcerated Nelson Mandela. With this small connection to South African history, I was ready to learn about the man South Africans fondly call "Madiba", or father.
The world would be well-served if everyone knew the story of Nelson Mandela. Most impre...more
The world would be well-served if everyone knew the story of Nelson Mandela. Most impre...more
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Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela is a former President of South Africa, the first to be elected in a fully representative democratic election, who held office from 1994–99.
Before his presidency, Mandela was an anti-apartheid activist, and the leader of the African National Congress's armed wing Umkhonto we Sizwe. The South African courts convicted him on charges of sabotage, as well as other crimes comm...more
More about Nelson Mandela...
Before his presidency, Mandela was an anti-apartheid activist, and the leader of the African National Congress's armed wing Umkhonto we Sizwe. The South African courts convicted him on charges of sabotage, as well as other crimes comm...more
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“I am fundamentally an optimist. Whether that comes from nature or nurture, I cannot say. Part of being optimistic is keeping one's head pointed toward the sun, one's feet moving forward. There were many dark moments when my faith in humanity was sorely tested, but I would not and could not give myself up to despair. That way lays defeat and death.”
—
609 people liked it
“No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.”
—
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