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TITAN BARACK OBAMA TITAN MAGAZINE // OCTOBER 2014/ VOL NR. 1 // 11 $ ADOLF HITLER VLADIMIR PUTIN

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A political and historical magazine about Titans.

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Page 1: TITAN magazine

T I T A N

BARACK OBAMA

T I T A N M A G A Z I N E / / O C T O B E R 2 0 1 4 / V O L N R . 1 / / 1 1 $

ADOLF HITLERVLADIMIR PUTIN

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PUBLISHERMari Brenden

EDITOR IN CHIEFSigbjoern Skatvedt

EDITORIAL DESIGNERSilver Nancy

CREATIVE DIRECTORWilliam Hurdsbay

MANAGING EDITORJulie Houseweather

ART DIRECTORViil Coward

RESEARCH DIRECTORJuliann More

ASSISTANT MANAGING DIRECTORKaroline Waagsbo

CREATIVE WRITEREspen Bood

MARKETING CORDINATOREspen Bood

PHOTOGRAPHIC CONTRIBUTORInger Stenshorne

PAPERMatt, 200 grams

TEACHER GUIDANCECarl Etternavn

MAGAZINE CONTRIBUTORS

OCTOBER 2014 / VOL. 1 / NO 1.

TTITAN MAGAZINE // OCTOBER 2014 / VOL. 1 / NO 1.

SOURCES: BARACK OBAMA

www.time100.time.com

www.brainyquote.com/barack-obama

www.oprah.com/world/Oprah-Winfrey-Interviews-Barack-O-bama

www.content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article

SOURCES: ELLEN DEGENERES

www.time100.time.com

www.brainyquote.com/ellendegeneres

www.http://myhero.com/go/hero.asp?hero=E_Degeneres

SOURCES: MARSHALL MATHERS

www.time100.time.com

www.brainyquote.com/eminem

www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/-

the-music-industrys-100-most-influential-people

T I T A N

BARACK OBAMA

T I T A N M A G A Z I N E / / O C T O B E R 2 0 1 4 / V O L N R . 1 / / 1 1 $

ADOLF HITLERVLADIMIR PUTIN

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INFLUENTIAL PEOPLE

If you, like me have been raised with the notion that celebrities, sports stars and politicians were influ-ential because of what they do and not who they are we’re on the same page. But when you actually exa-mine today’s influential people and how they beca-me influential the picture has changed dramatically. Influence is both a natural and learned quality that is de-veloped over time. It can still be inherited, received by winning an election, or conveyed by a new job title but that’s becoming less prevalent now. I’ve seen influencers in the social age drive tremendous awareness for social causes leads for companies and votes for the presidential elections. Belive me its true.

Mari Brenden, editor of Titan magazine

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D L A

TITAN MAGAZINE // OCTOBER 2014 / VOL. 1 / NO 1.

CURRENT TOPIC // THIS MONTH TITANS

DICTATOR // ADOLF HILER/WORLD WAR TWO

This month we are introduced to Adolf Hitler’s methods and means to achieve po-pularity, fame and military success. We will look closer to how he got the power and what he did to persuade people of Germany.

From being raised in a small village in Kenya, where he grew up herding goats with his own father, Barack Hussein Obama is now the 44th president of the United States and the first African American president.

A shy white boy from East Detroit, Marshall Mathers was raised by a single mother in who was often too high to mother. He regularly changed schools, repeated the ninth grade three times and was constantly bullied.

LEADERS // BARACK OBAMA ARTISTS // EMINEM / MARSHAL MATHERS

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HI S

Nelson Mandela became the first black presi-dent of South Africa in 1994 until 1999. As a symbol of global peacemaking, evolutionary, politician and philanthropishe won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.

Emmy-winning talk-show host Ellen DeGe-neres was born in a suburb of New Orleans. She was one of the first women in show biz to come out as being openly gay and even after all the grief she did received, DeGeneres kept pushing forward.

In this moth ”Spotlight” we get to know the Ego’s of our generation. Those who think they can do no wrong or don’t care what oth-ers think of them are more prone to take risks, to push beyond what’s considered acceptable.

ARTISTS // EMINEM / MARSHAL MATHERS HUMAN RIGHT ACTIVISTS // MANDELAICONS // ELLEN DEGENERES SPOTLIGHT // KANYE WEST / PUTIN

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Image: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flypast / Text: time100.time.com /

Huge formation of American planes over USS Missouri and Tokyo Bay celebrating the signing, 2 September 1945.

DICTATORS // ADOLF HITLER1

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There were still many Germans who were skeptical of Hitler when he became chancellor in 1933. But Führer propaganda and military success soon turned him into an idol. ”Today Hitler Is All of Germa-ny.” The newspaper headline on Aug. 4, 1934 reflected the vital shift in power that had just taken place. Two days earlier, on the death of Reich President Paul von Hindenburg, Hitler had lost no time in abo-lishing the Reich Presidency and having the army swear a personal oath of unconditional obedience to him as ”the Führer of the German Reich and People.” He was now head of state and supreme comman-der of the armed forces, as well as head of government and of the monopoly party, the NSDAP. Hitler had total power in Germany, un-restricted by any constitutional constraints. The headline implied even more, however, than the major change in the constellation of power. It suggested an identity of Hitler and the country he ruled, signifying a complete bond between the German people and Hitler. ”Hitler for Germany -- all of Germany of Hitler” ran the slogan. As the result showed, however, reality lagged behind propaganda. One example of strong criticism leveled at Hitler can be seen in a report from the

Sir Ian Kershaw is a British historian of 20th-century Germany, who is one of the world’s leading experts on Adolf Hitler. Let’s have a look at the influential Hitler.

THERE WILL BE NO BLOOD OR SUFFER.

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Image: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consolidated_B-24_Liberator / Text: time100.time.com

United States Army Air Forces Consolidated B-24D Liberator over Maxwell Field, Alabama.

3 DICTATORS // ADOLF HITLER

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TODAY HITLER IS ALL OF GERMANY.

of deeply unhappy Germans, who have been snatched away from us, back into the Fatherland.I have restored the thousand-year-old historical unity of German living space; and I have attempted to accomplish all that without shedding blood and with-out inflicting the sufferings of war on my people or any other.” The claim that the change in Germany’s fortunes had been achieved single-handedly was, of course, absurd. There was not a word in this pas-sage of the pathological obsession with ”removing” the Jews, or of the need for war to acquire living space. Restoration of order, rebuilding the economy, rem-oval of the scourge of unemployment, demolition of the restrictions of the hated Versailles Treat and the establishment of

national unity all had wide popular reso-nance, ranging far beyond die-hard Na-zis, appealing in fact in different ways to practically every sector of society. Opini-on surveys long after the end of the Se-cond World War show that many people, even then, continued to associate these ”achievements” positively with Hitler. Little did the German people know that in supporting Adolf Hitler’s triumphs, they were now condemned to suffer the ca-tastrophe into which he had led them into.

gestapo in erlin in march 1936. Hitler’s toleration of the corruption and luxury life-style of the Party big-wigs at a time when poor living standards still afflicted. One day after this report was submitted, however, German troops marched into the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland. In a spectacular move that fully exposed the weakness of the western democracies, Hitler could celebrate his greatest trium-ph in foreign policy to date. The domestic problems of previous months with shorta-ge of foodstuffs, high prices, low wages and, in Catholic areas, much antagonism towards the regime over the struggle between the church and state were tem-porarly forgotten in the euphoria. Acco-rding to the official figures 98.9 per cent voted ”for the list and thus for the Führer,” the re-militarization of the Rhineland was unquestionably a hu-gely popular move, and one widely attri-buted to Hitler’s bold and skilful leadership. Much suggests, in fact, that between the death of Hinden-burg in August 1934 and the expansion into Austria and the Sudetenland four years later Hitler was indeed successful in gaining the backing of the vast majo-rity of the German people. Hitler’s popu-larity was never higher than at the height of his foreign-policy successes in 1938. The propaganda image was never better summarized than by Hitler himself in his Reichstag speech of 28 April 1939: ”I overcame chaos in Germany, restored or-der, enormously raised production in all fields of our national economy. I succee-ded in completely resettling in useful pro-duction those 7 million unemployed who so touched our hearts. I have led millions

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Image: time100.time.comv / Text: oprah.com/world

5 LEADERS // BARAK OBAMA

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A year ago, barack obama’s presidency seemed to be in deep trouble. His party had been thrashed in the 2010 congressi-onal elections. The economy was languis-hing. His poll ratings were dismal. A year later, thtough, he stands as the favorite to win the presidential election of 2012.It is something of a mystery although he did have some help. The Republicans helped a lot. Their intransigence in Con-gress proved annoying over time. Their presidential-primary campaign alterna-ted between farce and fierce and produ-

ced an unloved presumptive nominee in Mitt Romney. The economy began to do a little better. Obama, 50, showed great skill as a Commander in Chief, sending the Navy SEALs to take out Osama bin Laden and supervising an orderly depar-ture from Iraq. But most of all, in the roil of a difficult time, he seemed smart and steady, trustworthy. Monuments are not often built to politicians who are mere-ly trustworthy, but they do tend to win re-election. Barack is in trouble no more, he has won over the people of America.

From being raised in a small village in Kenya, where he grew up her-ding goats with his own father, Barack Hussein Obama is now the 44th president of the United States and the first African American president.

BOBAMA

Barack Hussain Obama

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Crowds jammed the streets of Rangoon. Children waved American flags. Parents craned to see something long thought impossible: the President of the USA had come to Burma with a message of hope, freedom and oppor-tunity. This was American leadership

When Barack Obama was first elected, the world saw the realization of the Ame-rican Dream. Today, they a leader who delivers ,whether it’s ending the war in Iraq, imposing crippling sanctions on Iran or reasserting our role as a Pacific power and building a world with more partners and fewer enemies. At home, the economy is growing, unemployment

is falling, and home prices are rising up.Now, President Obama is working to create broader prosperity at home and become more competitive abroad by in-vesting in our people, modernizing our infrastructure, building a new energy future and managing our long-term fiscal challenges. A better future for America.

FOR A BETTER FUTUTE FOR THE AMERICA.

Image: spiegel.de/international / Text: time100.time.com

Barack Hussein Obama II is the 44th t President and the first African American, here at his office at The White House.

7 LEADERS // BARAK OBAMA

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The man whose name means ”blessed” in Arabic is the son of a Kenyan fath-er, Barack Obama Sr., and a white mot-her, Ann Dunham, from Kansas. The two met as college students in Hawaii in 1959 and two years later, when Ann was just 19, their child was born. At the time, miscegenation was still a crime in many states, and it was also unwelcome in Kenya. Under that pressure, Barack Sr. left the marriage when his son was just 2 years old and went to Harvard to pursue a PhD. Later, after he had retur-

ned to Kenya to work as an economist, Ann married an Indonesian man, and when Barack was 6, the family moved to a town outside Jakarta, where Maya, Ba-rack’s sister, was born. After four years, the family returned to Hawaii and Ba-rack began corresponding with his father and trying to understand his African he-ritage. His father’s death in a traffic acci-dent in Nairobi in 1982 prompted Barack to travel to Kenya and meet the rest of his family for the first time.

Health insurance is for now everyone. If you don’t have health insurance, March 31st is your last chance to enroll in coverage that starts in 2014. If you currently have health insurance, you are already getting benefits thanks to the Obamacare: See the list below.

I THINK WHEN YOU SPREAD THE WEALTH AROUND IT’S GOOD FOR EVERYBODY.

1. Free preventive care, including check-ups and vaccinations

2. Money back if your insurance company doesn’t spend at least 80% of your premium on care.

3. No more lifetime limits on how much your insurance company will pay for.

4. Children and young adults can stay on their family plans until they turn 26.

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9 LEADERS // BARAK OBAMA

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I THINK WHEN YOU SPREAD WEALTH AROUND. ITS GOOD FOR EVERYBODY.Barack Obama

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11 ARTISTS // EMINEM

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Image: independent.com/arts / Text: timw.100.time.com

13 ARTISTS // EMINEM

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Born on october in st. Joseph, Missou-ri, rap musician Eminem had a turbulent childhood. He released The Slim Shady LP in early 1999, and the album went multi-platinum, garnering Eminem two Grammy Awards and four MTV Video Music Awards. Bad-boy rapper Marshall Mathers III has sparked controversy with

his extreme lyrics and courtroom battles with his former wife and mother (for lines such as ”my mother smokes more dope than I do”), but he is an astute busi-nessman with his own range of clothes. He also used his influence to persuade 75,000 young people to register to vote. Eminem has become a name to remeber.

A shy white boy from East Detroit, Marshall Mathers was raised by a single mother in who was often too high to mother. He regularly changed schools, repeated the ninth grade three times and was constantly bullied.

EMINEM

Marshall Mathers

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MY THING IS THIS: IF I’M SICK ENOUGH TO THINK IT - THEN I’M SICK ENAOUGH TO SAY IT.

A

Marshall Mathers

15 ARTISTS // EMINEM

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Concerned about the war, terrorism, the economy, religion and civil rights. People, not just those accustomed to watching the political process, are mo-bilized. Voter registration is booming. The candidates are so different that a cultural groundswell was inevitable. The complacent now feel pressed into action. Unlikely spokespeople are emerging as a major force to the voting booth; “King of All Media” Howard Stern, hip-hop artist and fashion designer Sean “P. Diddy” Combs, and now Eminem. Eminem’s vi-deos are always brilliant and often hila-rious. “Encore’s” first release, “Just Lose It,” features him as Michael Jackson, M.C. Hammer, Madonna and Pee Wee Herman. The “Mosh” video, a stunning

This election year, the most impor-tant of our lives, things have chan-ged. There is a lot at stake. Both Bush and Kerry supporters are concerned.

WITH THE SONG MOSH

A

NOTHING SHADY

17 ARTISTS // EMINEM

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combination of animation/live action, is both a visual and thematic departure from previous work. An animated Emi-nem is portrayed posting Iraqi-war news stories on a wall. Pounding the headli-nes in anger, he dons a black hoodie and leads the disenfranchised to “Rebel with a rebel yell.” As the action progresses, a black man (hip-hop artist Lloyd Banks) is harassed by police, a soldier is called back to duty, and a mother receives an eviction notice while Bush announces “tax cuts for the wealthy” on her TV. Each character dons a black hoodie like Eminem and joins the march. Storming a Federal building, they stop those who

On the Internet, where “Mosh” appea-red only a week before the election, chat room participants discuss “da black hoo-die movement.” “Mosh” stands out as one of Eminem’s most thought-provo-king songs, a wake up call to the people.

This was a wake up call that made as many as 75,000 young people register to vote. Eminem is clearly very influental.

In “Mosh,” the divide is socio-econo-mic. The rich are seen passing unfettered into the Federal building while the poor are held back. Eminem addresses his audience from the stage and leads their march in the street. Eminem’s course of action is clear: “To disarm this Weapon of Mass Destruction we call our Presi-dent, for present.” See the list below, for Marshall’s top four political rap songs.

would prevent them from entering with a fire hose. Once inside, they drop their hoods and form an orderly line behind Slim Shady now wearing a suit, signs in to vote. In the real world, Eminem, 32, did not register to vote until this year. When he desided to vote, he went big and got people inspired with the ”Mosh”.

1. Mosh: Encore

2. Square dance: The Eminem Show.

3. Rap game: D12 + Eminem, 8 mile

4. White America: The Eminem Show.

BLACK HOODIE - REBELWITH A REBEL YELL.

TO DISARM THIS WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION WE CALL OUR PRESIDENT, FOR PRESENT.

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Emmy-winning talk-show host Ellen DeGeneres was born in a suburb of New Orleans. Her father, Elliot De Generes and her mother, were sadly divorced when she was 16 years old. Her mother remarried, and her new husband, moved the family to Atlanta. It was a new fresh beginning for Ellen.

After graduating from Atlanta High School in 1976, Ellen attended the Uni-versity of New Orleans as a communi-cation major, but she dropped out after one semester. She held a wide variety of jobs until she turned to stand-up co-medy, making her bones at small clubs and coffeehouses before working her way up to emcee Clyde’s Comedy Club by 1981. Her comedy was described as a distaff version of Bob Newhart. Begin-ning in the early 1980s, she toured natio-nally and was named the funniest person in America after winning a competition sponsored by the cable network Show-time. Not only is ellen degeneres the host of one the most popular talk shows, she is also a huge advocate for lending

a helping hand. She is a huge supporter to numerous charities and foundations including; The Gentle Barn, Clothes Off Our Backs, The Humane Society, Stand Up to Cancer, ONE Foundation, Save the Music, Feeding America, Children’s Health Fund, and countless others. Ellen uses her show to help raise money for certain organizations, like the celebrity dunk tank, which helps benefit research for breast cancer. Ellen’s Big Stimulus Package and Cash Clunker are popular ones. Ellen is also an enormous activist

for gay rights. She was one of the first women in show biz to come out as being openly gay and even after all the grief she did received, DeGeneres kept pus-hing forward. She and her partner, Portia de Rossi, were wed in May of 2008, cau-sing quite a buzz. Ellen’s life and all of her hard work towards eliminating preju-dice, has been an huge inspiration to millions of people all around the world.

I

I HAVE GROWN TO BETHE PERSON THATI AM TODAY

Ellen Degeneres top charities:

1. The Gentle Barn

2. Clothes off our backs

3. Stand up to cancer

19 ICONS // ELLEN DEGENERES

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Image: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellen_DeGeneres / Text: myhero.com/gohero

Ellen from her own show ” The Ellen Show”, where here motto is to ”be a tv-show filled with laughter and joy”.

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one’s own talent, it also carries potentially huge artistic benefits. Those who think they can do no wrong or don’t care what others think of them are more prone to take risks, to push beyond what’s considered accep-table, to break rules in the name of furthe-ring not only their own greatness, but their own conception of what art is and what it can do. After a decade of excellent albums, he shows no signs of slowing it down. His sixth album, is also in many ways his most challenging: a harsh, abrasive and someti-mes off-putting statement that puts West at the centre of an ongoing debate over race, class and sex. Delusional or not, Kanye West still feels he has to prove to the world, that he hasn’t gotten the props he deserves. Until Kanye is persuaded otherwise, he likely will remain an exasperating, petulant narcissist who keeps making albums, like no one else.

Believe in yourself and anything is possible, many of our mothers told us when we were little. Some of todays most famous Titans sure did, and they are not afraid to show it. ”I’m the number one artist in the world right now. I’m the number one human being” Kanye West made that declaration in 2007, and seven years later he probably thinks he was selling himself short. Next to West’s ocean-wide narcissism, every other pop cele-brity is just a two-bit egocentric. narcissism carries with it an unwavering certainty about

I’MA LET YOU FINISH, BUT BEYONCÉ HAD ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS OF ALL TIME!

21 SPOTLIGHT // KANYE WEST / VLADIMIR PUTIN

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Amid all the smoke that is currently surround Russian politics, one thing is certain: Putin, got elected with 64 per cent of the popular vote on March 4, will remain in power for at least six years. But how did he go from being a man on the ropes to retaining office with such a commanding majority? Lets take a look at the Vladimir Putin.

The answer lies in Putin’s blend of na-tyral charisma, nationalism and pragma-tism (helpfully underwritten by corrupti-on and the brute force) as well as in the elitism of the opposition and the resig-ned masochism of his country’s voters.

Accused of having rigged last Decem-ber’s parliamentary elections to preserve the political monopoly of his deeply un-popular United Russia party, Putin made sure that the subsequent presidential race hewed closer to the letter of the consti-tution, while appearing to remain as un-faithful as ever to its spirit. In last year’s elections, both domestic pro-democracy groups and foreign observers tallied nu-merous voting irregularities. Golos, an

independent monitoring organisation, even released an interactive online map on which thousands of abuses - from bal-lot-stuffing to vote-rigging - were logged in real time, until the site was hit by a mysterious and terminal cyberattack. For the March 4 vote, not only were the ballot boxes made of tamper-proof, cle-ar plastic, but 180,000 CCTV cameras were also installed in polling stations across the country. On election day, the cameras may not have managed to pre-vent such dubious electoral miracles as a 99.82 per cent vote for Putin in Chechnya (apparently, enthusiasm for the president in the restive, Muslim-majority republic governed by the Kremlin-backed strong-man Ramzan Kadyrov was such that one

polling station even recorded a 107 per cent turnout). Nor did the gadgets stop so-called ”carousel voting”, in which busloads of voters were encouraged to cast ballots at multiple polling stations.

Let us take a look at the situation. While fraud might have helped Russia’s pre-sident avert an embarrassing run-off, it cannot explain everything about why he won. After all, despite mounting opposi-tion to Putin’s rule, poll after poll con-tinues to show him enjoying the confi-dence of the majority, while prominent opposition figures languish in obscurity. ”Putin may have won dishonestly,” wri-tes the democracy activist Milov, ”but the opposition did loose fair and square.”

A FAIR AND SQUARE GAME ?

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Nelson Mandela took the impossible and made it flesh. He took down an entren-ched system of white supremacy and, against all odds, shepherded a scarred country into democracy. Mandela recru-ited the international community, once a staunch ally of apartheid South Africa, to be an auxiliary, in this remarcable fight.

Mandela’s ability to build a global movement against racial oppression and to win, should remind us that the brutal realities of the world we live in are not set in stone. Though today’s crises, civil wars in Syria and Central African Repu-blic, grinding global poverty and disea-se may seem like things over which the world has no power, Mandela’s life says

otherwise. The moral rules of the world politics, the ones that say suffering abro-ad are “not my problem,” can be changed by people of great moral vision and acti-vists convinced of the rightness of their cause. It’s easy to forget that apartheid was once a contentious issue in global politics. The anti-apartheid movement’s first big victory, a 1962 U.N. General Assembly resolution establishing a Spe-cial Committee Against Apartheid, was not followed by any action in the vastly more powerful Security Council. The State Department is admirably frank about the reasoning: “Defenders of the Apartheid regime” in the West “had pro-moted it as a bulwark against commu-nism.” The United States, Britain, and

A FREE SOUTH AFRICAFOR ALL ETHNIC GROUPS

Some laws inforced during the apartheid:

1. Prohibition of mixed marriage.

2. Seperated areas for different races.

3. Prohibited adultery of mixed race.

Anti-apartheid movement countries:

1. The United States

2. Great Britain

3. West European countries,

H

Nelson Mandela became the first black president of South Africa in 1994 until 1999. As a symbol of global peacemaking, evolutionary, politician and philanthropishe won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.

23 HUMAN RIGHT ACTIVISTS // NELSON MANDELA

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other capitalist states saw South Africa as a useful ally, apartheid be damned. By 1986, the international scene had chan-ged entirely. Every one of South Africa’s most significant trading partners had placed onerous sanctions on the South African government, and the pressure was immense. The global anti-apartheid

movement, which took “Free Mandela!” as one of its most famous slogans, is of responsible for this sea change. This loo-se network of Third World governments, activists, artists, and ordinary citizens, organized boycotts, pushed sanctions, and lobbied legislators, to turn the Afri-kaner government into a global ”pirah”.

Some laws inforced during the apartheid:

1. Prohibition of mixed marriage.

2. Seperated areas for different races.

3. Prohibited adultery of mixed race.

4. Non-white had to carry identification.

5. Non-white could not go on strike.

6. Non-white could not attend white Universities.

Anti-apartheid movement countries:

1. The United States

2. Great Britain

3. West European countries, Image: mtholyoke.edu / Text: progress.org // Nelson Mandela visit the cell he was once a prisoner in.

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