Multicultural Leadership: Nelson Mandela
One of the primary effects of globalization has been a growing need to groom multicultural leaders who can function effectively across cross-cultural boundaries. In a multicultural world, a leader can only tend to the needs of his followers if he knows and understands these needs in the first place. There is need, therefore, for leaders and those aspiring to take up leadership positions to boost their understanding of different cultures and take leadership lessons from great multicultural leaders before them. Nelson Mandela is one such leader -- a multicultural figure who was able to understand and tend effectively to the needs of both the black and the white South African populations, managing to win the hearts of people both within and without the country. The subsequent sections of this text detail how Mandela was able to execute his multicultural leadership, and the specific traits that facilitated the same.
Nelson Mandela was born in Mvezo Village, Transkei South Africa in 1918 to Nonqaphi Nosekeni and Nkosi Gadla Mandela, then chief counselor to the king of the Thembu people (Nelson Mandela Foundation, 2014). His was a big family of 13 children, and he was the youngest of four boys (Nelson Mandela Foundation, 2014). He started his education at an English preparatory school near his village, graduated from the University of South Africa with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1943 and joined politics in 1944, when he signed up for the African National Congress Youth League (Nelson Mandela Foundation, 2014). As the head of the National Defiance Campaign of the ANC, Mandela led a series of demonstrations to protest laws that he termed unjust. This led him to be arrested in 1961 and sentenced to life imprisonment for allegedly trying to overthrow the state. He served 27 years and was elected South Africa's first black president in 1995.
A perfect demonstration of Mandela's appreciation for multiculturalism was the speech he gave from the dock during his conviction:
I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve; but if need be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die" (Nelson Mandela Foundation, 2014, n.pag).
Mandela's Leadership Traits
Sacrifice and Compromise: Born into royalty, Mandela developed respect for culture and traditions from a very young age; and having been brought up in a large extended family (where he was not the last child); he developed a strong sense of community, sacrifice, and compromise for the sake of protecting traditions. His sense of sacrifice for the greater good was demonstrated by the fact that he was willing to die, just so his people would be free from apartheid, and this made him connect effectively with the South African populace (Mazinter, 2013).
Tenacity and Self-Discipline: even while serving his jail term, when there was no surety that he would ever be released, Mandela maintained his resilience to continue studying and increase knowledge for both himself and other inmates. To him, continuous education/learning was the only way through which he would understand the culture of his own people as well as those of other groups (Mazinter, 2013). He strived to do the right thing even when faced with danger, and this resilience increased his ability to provide direction to his followers.
Sociability: while in prison, Mandela built strong social relations with prison guards, and was able to use these to his advantage in actualizing his goal to end apartheid (Mazinter, 2013). By maintaining strong social relations with the people with whom he worked in prison, and who had a direct influence on how inmates were treated, Mandela was able to influence their actions and thereby ensure that apartheid and dehumanization were undermined, at least within the prison facility. Influencing the masses begins with influencing the people around and closest to you.
Mandela's Leadership Style
A leader's style of leadership is the manner in which they manage, and give instructions to their followers (Hamilton, 2010). Mandela is seen to demonstrate the democratic leadership style, where there is two-way communication between the leader and his followers, and the leader strives to obtain input from followers so that courses of action and decisions are made jointly (Hamilton, 2010). He exercised a three-dimensional, rounded view to life and humanity, recognizing that people have different views, and the best solution could only be realized...
A Tale of Two LeadersIntroductionThere are many theories of leadership, from Great Man theory to trait theory to situational theory. Though they are all different in their orientation, there is a great deal of overlap from one to the other�and this is because at the end of the day leaders, no matter how they are approached, all tend to have some of the same things in common: they are good
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now