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ILLUSTRATION
Mandela's Eight Lessons of Leadership
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| Topics: | Courage; Discernment; Enemies; Fear; Friendship; Influence; Kindness; Leaders; Leadership; Leadership, general; Love; Love for enemies; Power; Responsibility; Wisdom |
| Filters: | Famous People; Free; International; Stories |
| References: | 2 Chronicles 32:7 , Psalm 78:72 , Matthew 5:43-48 , Luke 6:27-36 , Luke 10:25-37 , John 13:14-15 , Romans 12:8 , Romans 13:8-10 , 1 Corinthians 16:13 , Galatians 6:9 , Colossians 3:13 , 1 Peter 5:1-4 |
| Tone: | Commend |
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In honor of Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday, Richard Stengel, managing editor of Time magazine, put together Mandela's eight lessons of leadership. Stengel writes: "[The lessons] are cobbled together from…conversations old and new and from observing [Mandela] up close and from afar. Many of them stem directly from his personal experience. All of them are calibrated to cause the best kind of trouble: the trouble that forces us to ask how we can make the world a better place."
Here are Mandela's eight lessons of leadership:
- Courage is not the absence of fear—it's inspiring others to move beyond it.
- Lead from the front—but don't leave your base behind.
- Lead from the back—and let others believe they are in front.
- Know your enemy—and learn about his favorite sport. [In order to work more effectively with Afrikaners, Mandela learned their language and all about their most cherished sport: rugby.
- Keep your friends close—and your rivals even closer.
- Appearances matter—and remember to smile.
- Nothing is black or white.
- Quitting is leading too.
Richard Stengel, "Mandela: His 8 Lessons of Leadership," Time (7-21-08), pp. 42-48
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