Answer: House of Representatives
Explanation:
I just did it
Nelson Mandela certainly did not wait to see what others would do. He was an ordinary person in many ways, but he did extraordinary things, and the many names he was given reflected aspects of his being and his destiny. His birth name, Roliblahla, given by his father, is an isiXhosa name that means “pulling the branch of a tree”, but colloquially means “troublemaker”, and he grew to become a committed troublemaker in the name of equality and justice. On his first day of school, he was given the Christian name Nelson by his teacher, a common practice influenced by British colonials who couldn’t easily pronounce African names. In later life South Africans of all ages called him “Tata,” a term of endearment meaning “father.” He also is referred to as “Khulu,” the abbreviated form of “grandfather,” also meaning “Great One.” After his death he was affectionately referred to as Madiba, his clan name, that reflected respect for his ancestry.
Neville Chamberlain believed that the Munich Agreement had brought peace in Europe and thus supported it. On the other hand, Winston Churchill strongly opposed it.
More about Munich Agreement:
On September 30, 1938, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy reached an agreement in Munich. Despite a 1924 alliance agreement and a 1925 military treaty between France and the Czechoslovak Republic, it gave "cession to Germany of the Sudeten German area," for which it is also known as the Munich Betrayal.
The Munich Agreement is now largely viewed as a futile attempt at appeasement, and the phrase "a byword for the failure of appeasing expansionist totalitarian governments" has been used to describe it.
Learn more about the Munich Agreement here:
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I think he uses a metaphor about africa being a cake and he wants a piece of it, like the rest of of the european powers
Answer: European countries wanted to settle conflicting claims in Africa.