But let’s move on, shall we?
Q1) 5th December, 2013, saw the death of Nelson Mandela, former President of South Africa. In which year had he been born?
Q2) He’d been South Africa’s first black president: serving in the post from 1994 to which year?
Q3) Mr Mandela had been a Thembu member of which South African people: Zulu, Xhosa or Basotho?
Q4) As President, Mr Mandela had replaced who?
Q5) Nelson Mandela had been the first black President of South Africa: after the country dismantled it notorious minority rule regime. That regime had been known as what?
Q6) The word that described that regime came from Afrikaans. Afrikaans is a relative of which European language?
Q7) South Africa’s previous regime had imprisoned Nelson Mandela for 27 years: in a prison on Robben Island. In which year of the 1990s was he released?
Q8) Nelson Mandela famously led which South African political party?
Q9) South African reconciliation was helped, when Nelson Mandela publicly supported South Africa’s (all-white) national Rugby Union team, in the 1995 World Cup. That team takes its name from which deer?
Q10) Finally … Idris Elba played Nelson Mandela in the 2013 film about him. What was that film called?
Q1) 4th December, 1791, saw the publication of the world’s oldest Sunday newspaper. Which British paper are we talking about?A1) The Observer.
Q2) 4th December, 1998, saw the launch of what’s called the Unity module. The module is part of what?A2) The International Space Station.
Q3) 25th September, 1980, saw the death of drummer, John Bonham. His band subsequently announced they were to disband, on 4th December, 1980. Who were that band?
Q4) 4th December, 1975, saw Suriname join the United Nations. Suriname is on which continent: North America, South America or Africa?A4) South America.
Q5) Finally … 4th December, 1954, saw the first Burger King open. Its signature dish, the Whopper, is what: a kebab, a curry or a burger?A5) A burger.
“Never, never and never again shall it be that this beautiful land will again experience the oppression of one by another and suffer the indignity of being the skunk of the world. Let freedom reign!”
Nelson Mandela, from his inauguration address in 1994.
Good thinking!
ReplyDelete1. 1918
2. 1999
3. Xhosa
4. F.W. deKierk
5. apartheid
6. Dutch
7. 1990
8. the ANC (African National Congress)
9. the Springboks
10. Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom