Long
Walk to Freedom by Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Qs & Ans
Lesson 2 from the book First Flight
A. Very
Short Answer-type Questions (In Single Sentences)
1. Mandela
became the first black President of
a new nation.
2. Zenani was the daughter of Nelson
Mandela.
3. 100,000
South African men, women
and children of all races sang and danced with joy.
4. The inauguration ceremony took place on 10th May, 1994.
5. Thabo
Mbeki was sworn in as
first deputy president.
6. The formation of a democratic government
in South Africa has been called a common
victory for justice, peace and human dignity.
7. Nelson Mandela takes the pledge to remove
bondage of poverty, hunger and all
kinds of discrimination.
8. The smoke that trailed in the sky by
Impala jets symbolised the new South
African flag.
9. The old system in South Africa was based
on hatred.
10. The policy of apartheid created a deep and lasting wound in South
Africa to its people.
11. The people of South Africa are its
greatest wealth.
12. Obligation
to his family, his people and the country are the twin obligations for Mandela.
13. The twin obligations are filled only in civil
and humane society.
14. Hatred towards each other robs the humanity.
15. Inauguration ceremony took place in Pretoria in South Africa.
16. Mandela talks about the inauguration of
the formation of new government in South Africa in this lesson
17. Nelson Mandela feels hungry for the
freedom of his countrymen.
Q1.Where did the
ceremonies take place? Can you name any public buildings in India that are made
of sandstone?
Ans. The ceremonies took place in the campus of the Union Building of
Pretoria. The Parliament House in New Delhi, the Rashtrapati Bhavan in New
Delhi, the Supreme Court of India in New Delhi and Madras High Court in Chennai
are some examples of Indian public buildings that are made of sandstone.
Q2.Can you say how 10
May is an ‘autumn day’ in South Africa?
Ans: The tenth May is an ‘Autumn Day’ in
South Africa. It is because there was a large gathering of the guests from across
the world on that day there. They had come to attend the function of the
installation of South Africa’s first democratic and non-racial government.
Q3. At the beginning of
his speech, Mandela mentions “an extraordinary human disaster”. What does he mean
by this? What is the “glorious … human achievement” he speaks of at the end?
Ans. The coloured people in South Africa had
to suffer discrimination and other types of torture by the white rulers for
about three centuries. That was ‘an extraordinary human disaster’. Mandela
talks of ‘glorious human achievement’ because a black person became the
president of the country where the whites did all types of cruelties for about
three hundred years.
Q4. What does Mandela
thank the international leaders for?
Ans. Nelson Mandela
thanks the international leaders because they came to South Africa to attend
the function of forming the first non racial and democratic government there.
Mandela felt privileged to be the host to the nations of the world
because not too long ago, the South Africans were considered outlaws. He thus
thanked all the international leaders for having come to witness his
investiture as President since this event could be considered as a common
victory for justice, peace and human dignity.
Q5. What ideals does he
set out for the future of South Africa?
Answer
Mandela set out the ideals of poverty alleviation, removal of
suffering of people. He also set the ideal for a society where there would be
no discrimination based on gender or racial origins.
Q6. What do the military generals do? How has
their attitude changed, and why?
Answer
The highest military generals of the South African defence force
and police saluted Mandela and pledged their loyalty.
Their attitude towards blacks had taken great change. Instead of arresting a black they saluted him.
Their attitude towards blacks had taken great change. Instead of arresting a black they saluted him.
Q7.
Why were two national anthems sung?
Ans. The two national anthems were sung
when Nelson Mandela’s government was formed. It was done to create balance
between two races, the white and the black. It showed the new government’s
vision of equality also.
Q8.
What does courage mean to Mandela?
Ans. Mandela thinks that courage is not
the absence of fear in mind. It is the victory over it. Fear is present in
every person. But the brave person is that who conquers fear.
Q9.
Mandela talks of twin obligations. What are these?
Ans. According to Mandela, every person
has twin obligations in life. One is towards his family, to wife and children.
The other is towards his people and the country.
Q10. In this lesson, Mandela talks of the
oppressor. Is the oppressor free in any sense or is he also a slave of
something?
Ans. Madela says that the oppressor is a slave
of hatred. He is imprisoned behind the bars of prejudices and
narrow-mindedness. He has made the other person slave.
Q11.
What does Mandela mean when he says that he is “the sum of all those African
patriots”, who had made struggle for freedom in South Africa before him?
Ans. By saying so, he pays a glowing
tribute to the patriots of South Africa who had struggled for freedom so far.
He succeeded in his great mission of getting freedom to South Africa. So he
finds their blessings in himself.
Long
Answer-type Qs (About 100 words)
Q1.
What twin obligations does Mandela talk about in this lesson?
Ans. Nelson Mandela says that everyone
has twin obligations. One obligation is towards one’s family, children and
parents. Another obligation is towards his people and the country. People
fulfil these obligations towards their families and the country in their own
ways. But in South Africa, it was not possible to do so. The white-skinned
people had put several restrictions on the black coloured people under the
policy of apartheid. The person doing his duty for his people was punished and
sent behind the bars. Mandela was also sent to prison for fulfilling his
obligation towards his people. Thus he was not allowed to fulfil his twin
obligations.
Q2.
How did the meaning of the word ‘freedom’ change with the passage of time for
Mandela?
Ans. Mandela said that freedom had
different meanings for him according to the stages in his age. In the days of
his boyhood, it was just running into his fields near his mother’s hut and to
swim in the clear water of a stream. He was free to do the small things that a
child could do. A he grew in age, that freedom turned into an illusion for him.
He began to understand that his freedom was already snatched. As a student, he
desired for freedom only just for himself. It was the freedom to stay out at
night, read what he pleased and go where he chose. Later as a young man, he
yearned for the real kind of freedom. It was the freedom to fulfil his twin
obligations. But it was not there.
Q3.
What does Mandela say about the policy of apartheid? How did it affect peoples
of South Africa?
Ans. The white-skinned peoples of South
Africa patched up their differences and erected (set up) a system of racial
domination (जातीय शाशन) against the dark-skinned peoples of
their own land. The policy of apartheid /əˈpɑː.taɪt/ created
a deep and lasting wound in my country and my people. The people of South
Africa would take a long time to recover from the deep would created by the
policy of apatheid. But the continuous oppression and cruelty on the South
Africans produced great men like the Oliver
Tambos, the Walter Sisulus, the Chief Luthulis, etc. They were the men
of such extraordinary courage, wisdom and generosity (kindness) that their like
may never be known again.