French
Spanish
Facebook
Twitter
GLOBAL MOVEMENT FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE

On the left below, please find an article for the Culture of Peace News Network and on the right the discussion related to this article. You are invited to read and join in the discussion by clicking on any of the questions listed here, or, if you wish, you may enter a new discussion question as described on the bottom of this page. Please take the time to check one of the boxes below as to whether this article should be given a high priority, a medium priority or no priority

Learn Write Read Home About Us Discuss Search Subscribe Contact
by program area
by region
by category
by recency

United Nations and Culture of Peace
Global Movement for a Culture of Peace
Values, Attitudes, Actions
Rules of the Game
Submit an Article
Become a CPNN Reporter

Mandela archive goes live on the web

an article by www.nelsonmandela.org

Video: Nelson Mandela: My Moment with a Legend

Google and the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory (NMCM) have announced that the new Nelson Mandela Digital Archive is now live on the web, freely accessible to the global public.



click on photo to enlarge

Google gave a $1.25m [R8.6million] grant to the Johannesburg-based NMCM in 2011 to help preserve and digitise thousands of archival documents, photographs and videos about Mr Mandela. And now the digital exhibition has become a reality.

Along with historians, educationalists, researchers and activists, users from around the world now have access to extensive information about the life and legacy of this extraordinary African statesman.

The new online multimedia archive includes Mr Mandela’s correspondence with family, comrades and friends, diaries written during his 27 years of imprisonment, and notes he made while leading the negotiations that ended apartheid in South Africa. The archive will also include the earliest-known photograph of Mr. Mandela, rare images of his cell on Robben Island in the 1970s, and never-seen drafts of Mr Mandela's manuscripts for the sequel to his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom.

“It is invigorating to see our combined efforts become a reality,” said Verne Harris from the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory. “This digital initiative will make it possible for us to reach the full spectrum of our stakeholders, from the global elite to systemically disadvantaged South Africans. Visitors can search and browse the archives to explore different parts of Mr Mandela’s life and work in depth: Early Life, Prison Years, Presidential Years, Retirement, Books for Mandela, Young People, and My Moments with a Legend.”

Steve Crossan, Director of the Google Cultural Institute, said: “The Mandela Digital Archive Project shows how the Internet can help preserve historical heritage and make it available to the world. We’ve worked closely with the NMCM to create an interactive online experience with powerful search and browsing tools, so that users can explore Mr Mandela’s inspiring life story.”

“The Archive currently includes over 1 900 unique images, documents and videos, and will grow over time,” said Luke Mckend, Country Manager for Google South Africa.

“South Africans from all walks of life can now engage with important parts of our country’s history. For example, reading handwritten pages of a letter smuggled from Robben Island in 1977, or seeing warrant documents that sent Mr Mandela to jail, first for five years and then for life.”

The Nelson Mandela Digital Archive project is an initiative by the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory and the Google Cultural Institute. With a team of dedicated Googlers around the world, the Cultural Institute builds tools to preserve cultural heritage and make it accessible worldwide. Other projects include showcasing the Dead Sea Scrolls, presenting thousands of works of art online through the Art Project, and the digitisation of the the Yad Vashem Holocaust materials.

To start exploring the Nelson Mandela archive visit: http://archive.nelsonmandela.org.

DISCUSSION

Question(s) related to this article:


The truth about our history, Why does it matter to our present and our future?

* * * * *

Latest reader comment:

Most of our histories are biased toward acceptance of the culture of war, although this bias is not usually explicit.  One exception is my book The History of the Culture of War.  

As for the culture of peace, it is still early since it is only beginning to develop as an alternative to the culture of war.  I can recommend my own Early History of the Culture of Peace as well as the book Cultures of Peace: The Hidden Side of History by the late Elise Boulding.


This report was posted on April 18, 2012.

If you wish to start a new discussion topic on this article, you need to register and log in. Then please copy the title of this article which is Mandela archive goes live on the web and its number which is 770 and enter this information along with your discussion question and an introductory response to the question here.


A few stories are retained on the main listings if they are considered by readers to be a priority. If you have not already done so, please take the time to check a box below: should this article be considered as a priority?