Nelson Mandela and Cesar Chavez
“I learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it. The brave man is not he who does not feel afraid, but he who conquers that fear”. Nelson Mandela said. “Our language is the reflection of ourselves. A language is an exact reflection of the character and growth of its speakers,” said Cesar Chavez. Nelson Mandela and Cesar Chavez are both great leaders and they will be remembered. But both of them have different situations that went on in their lifetime. They all have a different story. For example, Nelson Mandela was fighting for the rights of the African Americans and Cesar Chavez was fighting for the rights of farmers who didn't get paid enough. But which one is more persuasive?
…show more content…
Nelson Mandela didn't agree with the government so he was against it.
So since he was fighting for the rights of farm workers, he was sentenced to prison because they were unfair and called it a "crime". So then for awhile he got out of prison in 1990. After Nelson Mandela got out of prison he started helping people and giving justice to the people and eventually became the president of South Africa but later died in December 5, 2013. Cesar Chavez was born in Yuma, Arizona. He was part of a family of six children in total. His family owned a grocery store and a ranch but then they lost their land in the Great Depression. They lost their house and all their things because of the Great Depression. So after all of the hard things happened he started helping the farmers who didn’t get paid enough while they were working in the
farms. In my opinion I think that the more persuasive person would be Nelson Mandela.Nelson Mandela went through a lot of trouble in the past. He went to prison just because he was defending the rights of South Africans. But he was in prison for 27 years trying to make a better future in South Africa. He also helped get Human Rights. But that happened after he left prison. But he still left a remarkable step in South Africa.Nelson Mandela left a really remarkable step in South Africa. That's why so many people describe him as a hero because he was fighting for that right for 27 years . Even though Nelson Mandela may have a more persuasive story Cesar Chavez also did a lot of things to help people. Cesar Chavez helped the people who are farm workers who didn't get paid enough.He helped them because he knows how the people felt like when they didn't get a lot of money. He also left a remarkable step in the world. It was very special. Nelson Mandela and Cesar Chavez are both great leaders who helped the people during that time. Cesar Chavez sadly died in April 23, 1993 in San Luis, AZ . Nelson Mandela died in December 5, 2013. They did different things in their lifetime that helped improve their own life. But the one that has the more persuasive story would be Nelson Mandela because he tried to help the south africans that needed help and that weren’t treated well be the government. He was in prison for many years to help the people. He had to suffer just to get the justice for all the people. Now he’s in heaven but after he got out of prison he became the president of South Africa. Cesar Chavez and Nelson Mandela are still a great part of people’s life.
Cesar Chavez, a civil rights activist, was a major proponent of workers’ rights in Hispanic history. Cesar was born in 1927, in Yuma, Arizona, as a Mexican-American. He grew up in a large family of ranchers and grocery store owners. His family lived in a small adobe house, which was taken away during the Great Depression. In order to receive ownership of the house, his father had to clear eighty acres.
As we know about These hero’s I want to contrast a little about them. I want to start with Fannie Lou Hamer she was an southern sharecropper in which she was poor. She had dropped out of school when she was 12 years old to help out on the farm. But she always had been had all of her life. No she didn’t wait on a bus until an white man told her to move to make a change. She pushed herself by doing things any man think that a woman could not do. As you know she joined the SNCC. Hamer founded Mississippi’s Freedom Democratic party.
By the time he finished the 8th grade, he dropped out of school to become a full-time migrant worker to help his family out. When Chavez became a full-time worker, he was exposed to the hardships of a farm worker's life. This sprang his dream of helping other farm laborers like him. On his birthday, March 31st 1962 he founded the National Farm Workers Association, which later became known as the United Farm Workers of America. It started off with 10 people in the group, him, his wife, and his eight children but soon he started to recruit other members.
Both of the speeches, Martin Luther King's and Cesar Chavez', are powerful peices and communicate one vision: equality. King and Chavez have two very different styles of writing but the message from both is simmilar. for example both king and chavez discuss how their people are discriminated against because of their skin color, and how their people have neither the right to vote in the the south, nor the will to vote in the north , and in Chavez' situation, to have their vote counted. however similar their message's may be, their writing styles are different. Chavez talks about statistics, about why and how his people are treated. king held that the atrocitys commited against his people were self evident and as such did not need to be proved to anyone. kings message was meant to encompass the entire Uninted States while Chavez' was directed primarily at California.
One of the noteworthy aspects of his life is that he was not what some would consider a “natural-born” leader, meaning that he was not born into a family of great wealth or power. Chavez was born on March 31, 1927 near the town of Yuma, Arizona to a humble, hardworking Mexican immigrant family. His grandfather, Cesario Chavez, for whom he was named after, had worked hard to save enough money to be able to buy land in Arizona and raise his thirteen children, which included Cesar’s father. His father, Librado Chavez, grew up, got married, and opened up a couple of small businesses to help provide for his family and build a better life for his own children. According to biographical accounts about Cesar, this is when and where he began to learn and gain his first understanding about the importance of networking by observing his father at work and by helping run the family businesses....
Cesar Chavez was a Mexican-American who was born on March 31, 1927 as a child he spent most of his time working on a farm. Later he would become a strong union leader and labor organizer. He would also dedicate his life to improving pay and working conditions for many farm workers. As a former farm worker himself he knew too well the hardships and conditions that they faced daily. Later in his life he would lead a boycott that would result in guaranteeing farm workers the right to unionize.
Cesar Chavez was born on March 31, 1927 in a small town near Yuma, Arizona near the border. Born into a poor family, Cesar grew up in Arizona and in a small adobe home along with his parents (United Farm Workers 1). In his early life Cesar experienced a lot of injustices and saw how not only his parents, but most farm workers were being mistreated and overworked. Cesar Chavez later learned a lesson in his life about injustices that he would never be able to forget (United Farm Workers 1). Cesar would say “ the love for justice that is in us is not only the best part of our being, but is also the most true to our nature” (United Farm Workers 1).
The Similarities and Differences of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois’s Views During the late 19th and early 20th century, racial injustice was very prominent and even wildly accepted in the South. Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois were two of the most renowned “pioneers in the [search] for African-American equality in America” (Washington, DuBois, and the Black Future). Washington was “born a slave” who highly believed in the concept of “separate but equal,” meaning that “we can be as [distant] as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress” (Washington 1042). DuBois was a victim of many “racial problems before his years as a student” and disagreed with Washington’s point of view, which led
Through the years, individuals have shown that a single man can make a difference. Men who, when committed to a cause, will rise up with honor, integrity, and courage. Cesar Chavez was such a man. He represented the people and rose above his self concerns to meet the needs of the people. Cesar Chavez showed us that, “The highest form of freedom carries with it the greatest measure of discipline.” He lived by this standard and fought freedom with the highest form of dignity and character.
Speeches are a method of persuading people to do something. For Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, their speeches were to bring equality for the people of color. However, their approaches are different. Consequently, the effects may be different. An example of their contrasting differences is a speech from each, King’s “I Have a Dream” and X’s “The Black Revolution”. Their speeches used pathos, a central metaphor, and a warning, but was presented differently.
Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy were two very commendable men. They were two very different men that I feel had the same incredible amount passion for human beings. Both Dr. King and President Kennedy had such high hopes for this country and regardless of the sad and devastating time era, they both spoke with much poise and compassion. I truly believe they are exactly what this country needed and still needs to this very day.
There are many reasons why Chavez became part of the movement, but the major reason was his childhood. It is noted that Cesar Chavez was one of five children born to Librado Chavez and Juana Estrada who were farmers. As a child in Arizona, he grew up nourished by the values of his family and his rural Mexican-American community. His mother taught him the importance of non-violence and self-sacrifice and his grandmother impressed upon his the values of the Catholic faith. And as a child, he experienced racial discrimination in school. (Griswold del Castillo) Chavez quit school after the eighth grade to work full-time in the fields. His grandfather had homesteaded some 112 acres that the family soon lost because of t...
The definition of a leader is a person who influences people to a common purpose. Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr are examples of great leaders who brought about social change through alternative means in the 20th century. Their means were through nonviolent protests of freedom. Gandhi fought for freedom from Great Britain, and King fought for freedom from segregation and equal rights for all Americans.
Nelson Mandela: The Art of Civil Disobedience Have you ever wondered what it was like to make a difference and even change something in your country? How would you feel if you were considered a hero by your people? Civil disobedience is a form of protest that uses a law to show that it is not needed. The protestors intentionally violate a law that they are protesting against (Suber). For example, Rosa Parks used civil disobedience by sitting at the front of the bus because she believed that all people are the same and deserved equal rights.
Thesis: Actions, beliefs, and patience are characteristics that are comparable in both the lives of Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela.