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    'Mandela: An Audio History'

    Series, Web Site Mark South Africa's 10 Years as a Democracy

    Listen: Part 2: The Underground Movement
    Listen: Part 3: Robben Island
    Listen: Part 4: State of Emergency
    Listen: Part 5: Democracy

    All Things Considered, April 26, 2004 · In April 1994, the world watched as millions of South Africans, most of them jubilant but many wary, cast their ballots in that nation's first multi-racial election. The outcome: Nelson Mandela became president of a new South Africa.

    Mandela's journey from freedom fighter to president capped a dramatic half-century-long struggle against white rule and the institution of apartheid. This week on All Things Considered, a five-part series marks the 10th anniversary of South Africa's first free election.

    Produced for NPR by Joe Richman of Radio Diaries and Sue Johnson, Mandela: An Audio History tells the story of the struggle against apartheid through rare sound recordings of Mandela himself, as well as those who fought with and against him.

    Stories in This Series:

    Part 1: The Birth of Apartheid (1944-1960)

    Monday, April 26, 2004: In the 1940s, Nelson Mandela was one of thousands of blacks who flocked to Johannesburg in search of work. At that time, a new political party came into power promoting a new idea: the separation of whites and blacks. Apartheid was born and along with it, a half-century-long struggle to achieve democracy in South Africa.

    Part 2: The Underground Movement (1960-1964)

    Tuesday, April 27, 2004: In 1960, with the African National Congress banned, resistance to apartheid went underground. Faced with an intensified government crackdown, Mandela launched Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) — a military wing of the ANC — and the armed struggle began. Two years later, Mandela was arrested and sentenced for high treason. He and eight others were sentenced to life in prison.

    Part 3: Robben Island (1964-1976)

    Wednesday, April 28, 2004: As Mandela and other political leaders languished in prison, the government crackdown appeared to have crushed the resistance movement. But on June 16, 1976, a student uprising in Soweto sparked a new generation of activism.

    Part 4: State of Emergency (1976-1990)

    Thursday, April 29, 2004: Guerilla soldiers on the border, unrest in the townships, striking workers and a wave of international attention were making South Africa's system of apartheid untenable. Something had to give — and it did on Feb. 2, 1990, when South African President F.W. de Klerk announced he would lift a 30-year ban on the ANC and free Mandela after 27 years in prison.

    Part 5: Democracy (1990-1994)

    Friday, April 30, 2004: On April 27, 1994, Nelson Mandela was elected South Africa's first black president. But that triumph didn't come easily. The four years between Mandela's release and the transition to democracy were some of the most volatile and painful in the country's history.

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