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After receiving a primary education at a local
mission school, Nelson Mandela was sent to Healdtown,
a Wesleyan secondary school of some repute where
he matriculated. He then enrolled at the University
College of Fort Hare for the Bachelor of Arts
Degree where he was elected onto the Student's
Representative Council. He was suspended from
college for joining in a protest boycott. He
went to Johannesburg where he completed his
BA by correspondence, took articles of clerkship
and commenced study for his LLB. He entered
politics in earnest while studying in Johannesburg
by joining the African National Congress in
1942.
At the height of the Second World War a small
group of young Africans, members of the African
National Congress, banded together under the
leadership of Anton Lembede. Among them were
William Nkomo, Walter Sisulu, Oliver R. Tambo,
Ashby P. Mda and Nelson Mandela. Starting out
with 60 members, all of whom were residing around
the Witwatersrand, these young people set themselves
the formidable task of transforming the ANC
into a mass movement, deriving its strength
and motivation from the unlettered millions
of working people in the towns and countryside,
the peasants in the rural areas and the professionals.
Their chief contention was that the political
tactics of the old guard' leadership of the
ANC, reared in the tradition of constitutionalism
and polite petitioning of the government of
the day, were proving inadequate to the tasks
of national emancipation. In opposition to the
old guard', Lembede and his colleagues espoused
a radical African Nationalism grounded in the
principle of national self-determination. In
September 1944 they came together to found the
African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL).
Mandela soon impressed his peers by his disciplined
work and consistent effort and was elected to
the Secretaryship of the Youth League in 1947.
By painstaking work, campaigning at the grassroots
and through its mouthpiece Inyaniso' (Truth)
the ANCYL was able to canvass support for its
policies amongst the ANC membership. At the
1945 annual conference of the ANC, two of the
League s leaders, Anton Lembede and Ashby Mda,
were elected onto the National Executive Committee
(NEC). Two years later another Youth League
leader, Oliver R Tambo became a member of the
NEC.
Spurred on by the victory of the National Party
which won the 1948 all-White elections on the
platform of Apartheid, at the 1949 annual conference,
the Programme of Action, inspired by the Youth
League, which advocated the weapons of boycott,
strike, civil disobedience and non-co-operation
was accepted as official ANC policy.
The Programme of Action had been drawn up by
a sub-committee of the ANCYL composed of David
Bopape, Ashby Mda, Nelson Mandela, James Njongwe,
Walter Sisulu and Oliver Tambo. To ensure its
implementation the membership replaced older
leaders with a number of younger men. Walter
Sisulu, a founding member of the Youth League
was elected Secretary-General. The conservative
Dr A.B. Xuma lost the presidency to Dr J.S.
Moroka, a man with a reputation for greater
militancy. The following year, 1950, Mandela
himself was elected to the NEC at national conference.
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