Nelson Mandela Long Walk to Freedom — Question 5
Back to all questionsNelson Mandela set the ideals of liberating people from bondage of poverty, deprivation and suffering. He also set the ideal for a society where there would be no discrimination based on gender or racial origins.
Page 21
Nelson Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom – Comprehensive Web Content
This is an expanded study resource for Nelson Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela (First Flight). Use this alongside the chapter notes for complete board exam preparation.
Detailed Summary
The chapter describes Mandela’s inauguration on May 10, 1994 as South Africa’s first democratically elected president. He reflects on the meaning of courage, twin obligations (to family and country), and freedom. He argues that the oppressor is as much a prisoner as the oppressed, and that true freedom means liberating both sides from prejudice and hatred.
Theme Analysis
Freedom
Mandela traces his understanding from childhood (personal freedom) to political awareness (systemic oppression) to the insight that freedom is indivisible — no one is free until all are free.
Courage
Courage is not the absence of fear but the triumph over it. Mandela saw this courage in ordinary South Africans who endured apartheid with dignity.
Twin Obligations
Duty to family and duty to country. Under apartheid, fulfilling both was nearly impossible for a Black person.
Reconciliation
The oppressor and oppressed are both robbed of humanity. True liberation frees both from hatred.
Character Study
Courageous, reflective, forgiving, visionary, humble
Resilient, diverse, hopeful — represent collective struggle and triumph
Literary Devices & Techniques
- Antithesis: "The oppressor and the oppressed alike are robbed of their humanity"
- Metaphor: "Long walk to freedom" — freedom as a journey
- Repetition: Emphasis on courage and freedom definitions
- Imagery: Jets in formation, rainbow nation gathering
Board Exam Questions with Model Answers
Q: What does Mandela mean by "twin obligations"? (3 marks)
Model Answer: Every person has dual obligations: to family (parents, spouse, children) and to community/country. Under apartheid, a Black South African could rarely fulfil both. Mandela chose country, sacrificing family life for decades.
Q: How did Mandela’s understanding of freedom change? (5 marks)
Model Answer: As a child, freedom was personal — running in fields. As a young man, he realised his freedom was an illusion under apartheid. He then understood freedom is indivisible: no one is truly free until all are free. Finally, he recognised that even the oppressor needs liberation from hatred.
Key Vocabulary
Refer to the chapter notes and teacher aid for a complete vocabulary list. Focus on understanding words in context rather than memorising definitions in isolation.
Revision Checklist
- Can you summarise the text in 80 words?
- Can you name all major characters and their traits?
- Can you identify at least 3 literary devices with examples?
- Can you write a 5-mark answer on the main theme?
- Have you practised all textbook exercise questions?