Extended Reading
  • Raul 2022-04-11 08:01:01

    goodbye south africa

    2021.04.26

    In South Africa in 1968, under the apartheid system, the whole society was full of racial discrimination. Black people did not have equal rights and freedom. In people's minds, black people were terrorists. The Kronstad maximum security prison on Robin Island is where the organized rebels...

  • Myles 2022-04-11 08:01:01

    hero go

    Recently, I have seen the news of Mr. Mandela's death many times on Weibo, Moments, and the news. As I only know a thing or two about his great career, I have the desire to relive his non-life stories.
    After watching this film, I have the following thoughts:
    1. Let’s talk about the core theme,...

  • Nico 2022-04-13 09:01:07

    One is the spiritual shackles, the other is the physical shackles, the two people help each other to lift the shackles of the great friendship. It tells the story of how Mandela, the first president of South Africa, became the most influential political figure in the contemporary world. Fight for freedom and eliminate racism, may the world be at peace!

  • Mitchell 2022-04-14 09:01:07

    Note: Once you succeed, your bones will die...

Goodbye Bafana quotes

  • James Gregory: These ideas you'd kill for?

    Nelson Mandela: These ideas I'd die for.

  • [last lines]

    Newscaster: Mr. Mandela, the man who has been in prison for nearly three decades, will be appearing in public for the first time any moment now... There is Mr. Mandela, Mr. Nelson Mandela, a free man, taking his first steps into a new South-Africa...

    James Gregory: [in front of TV, reading from the 'Freedom Charter'] "There shall be peace and friendship. And all who love their people and their country shall say, as we say here: These freedoms we will fight for, side by side, throughout our lives, until we have won our liberty."

    Newscaster: That is the man the world has been waiting to see, walking strongly, step by step further into freedom.

    Subtitle: Four years later, in 1994, Nelson Mandela became the first democratically elected president of South-Africa.