In the winter of 1964, Mandela arrived on Island, off the coast from Bloubergstrand. It was here in a prison that Mandela would spend eighteen of his twenty-seven years of prison sentence before he would be freed just prior to the fall of apartheid in South Africa. From 1961 to 1991, a maximum-security prison here held enemies of apartheid.

The racist regime in South Africa cramped Nelson Mandela to a small cell. The ground was his bed. Contact with friends, family, and well-wishers was limited. Mandela was allowed one visitor a year for thirty minutes. He could write and receive one letter every six months.
Nelson Mandela was freed on 11 February 1990. He emerged from the jail as a mature leader who would fight and win the great political battles that would create a new democratic South Africa.
Watch MANDELA ‘BACK’ IN HIS ROBBEN ISLAND CELL – BBC NEWS
Featured Image: Nelson Mandela revisits his former prison cell at Robben Island / Image: Rex, via mirror.co.uk
Website: robben-island.org.za
You may also like
-
Benazir Bhutto – The daughter of Pakistan’s assassinated in Rawalpindi
-
John F. Kennedy – The birthplace and childhood home in Brookline
-
Namirembe Cathedral – The Saint Paul’s Cathedral in Kampala
-
Ouagadougou Cathedral – The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Ouagadougou
-
Reunification Monument – The symbol of Reunification in Yaoundé
Great post 😊