MANDELA’S WAY…
Mandela’s Way: Fifteen Lessons on Life, Love and Courage
by
Richard Stengel
This isn’t right. In a very basic way, his intolerance of injustice was what goaded him. It was the engine of his discontent, his simple verdict on the basic immorality of apartheid. He was something was wrong and tried to right it. He saw injustice and tried to fix it. p. 7
Courage Is Not The Absence Of Fear. p. 21
Be Measured. p. 37
Lead From The Front. p. 55
Lead From The Rear. P. 73
…[T]he idea is that leadership at its most fundamental is about moving people in a certain direction—usually through changing the direction of their thinking and their actions. And the way to do that is not necessarily by charging out front and saying, Follow me, but by empowering or pushing others to move forward ahead of you. It is through empowering others that we impart our own leadership or ideas. p. 77
The African model of leadership is better expressed as ubuntu, the idea that people are empowered by other people, that we become our best selves through unselfish interaction with other82s. p. 81
Mandela knew that the surest way to defuse an argument is to listen patiently to the opposing point of view. p. 82
Look The Part. p. 85
Have A Core Principle. p. 101
[L]aw is nothing but organized force used by the ruling class to shape the social order in a way favourable to itself. p. 110
See The Good In Others. p. 115
Know Your Enemy. p. 131
Keep Your Rivals Close. p. 149
Know When To Say No. p. 161
It’s A Long Game. p. 169
Love Makes The Difference. p. 179
Quitting Is Leading Too. p. 199
It’s Always Both. p. 207
Find Your Own Garden. p. 215
Jeremiad: a prolonged lamentation or complaint; a cautionary or angry harangue, from Jerimiah (the depressive). p.