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With a Simple Funeral, South Africa Bids Farewell to Desmond Tutu

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CAPE TOWN тАФ In an almost empty cathedral, with an unvarnished, rope-handled coffin placed before the altar, South Africa said farewell on Saturday to Archbishop Desmond M. Tutu with the simplicity that he had planned.

Archbishop TutuтАЩs death last Sunday at age 90 was followed by a week of mourning, as the world remembered his powerful role both in opposing apartheid and in promoting unity and reconciliation after its defeat.

But his funeral in a rain-soaked Cape Town, where pandemic regulations limited attendance to 100 and discouraged crowds outside, was far more subdued than the packed stadiums and parade of dignitaries that mourned South AfricaтАЩs other Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Nelson Mandela. It was exactly what the archbishop had wanted.

A hymn sung in his mother tongue, Setswana; MozartтАЩs тАЬLaudate DominumтАЭ; and a sermon delivered by an old friend were all part of what Archbishop Tutu designed for his requiem Mass, celebrated at St. GeorgeтАЩs Cathedral. There would be no official speeches beyond the eulogy, and the only military presence allowed at the funeral of a man who once said, тАЬI am a man of peace, but not a pacifist,тАЭ came when an officer brought South AfricaтАЩs national flag to be handed to his widow, Nomalizo Leah Tutu.

The coronavirus pandemic further scaled down proceedings. With a limited guest list, the only international heads of state in attendance had a close relationship with the archbishop, like King Letsie III of Lesotho, who spent time with the Tutu family as a child at a boarding school in England. A former president of Ireland, Mary Robinson, read one of the prayers during the requiem Mass. With singing discouraged in closed spaces to reduce the spread of the virus, the choir performed in an adjacent hall.

тАЬDesmond was not on some crusade of personal aggrandizement or egotism,тАЭ said the friend who delivered the sermon, Michael Nuttall, who as bishop of Natal in the 1980s and 1990s became known as тАЬTutuтАЩs No. 2.тАЭ He described their relationship, as the first Black archbishop of Cape Town and his white deputy, as a precursor тАЬof what could be in our wayward, divided nation.тАЭ

Archbishop Tutu тАЬloved to be loved,тАЭ though, recalled Bishop Nuttall, and this was the enduring image of the diminutive man in flowing clerical robes: a dynamic leader who joked and scolded with equal gusto.

The activist archbishop was at the forefront of the struggle against apartheid. Outside South Africa, he campaigned for international sanctions as he preached about the injustices that Black South Africans suffered under the segregationist regime. At home, he presided over dozens of funerals of young activists killed as the countryтАЩs townships resembled a war zone in the final years of apartheid.

After the countryтАЩs first democratic election in 1994, he led the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and christened the тАЬnewтАЭ South Africa the тАЬrainbow nationтАЭ as he tried to shepherd its citizens toward national healing. In the nearly three decades since the end of apartheid, he continued to speak out against the corruption and inequality that sullied that ideal.

тАЬWhen he first spoke about us as a тАШrainbow nation,тАЩ South Africa was a different place and were going through a very difficult time,тАЭ President Cyril Ramaphosa said in his eulogy. тАЬHe has left us at another difficult time in the life of our nation.тАЭ

In the week leading up to the funeral, those who were close with Archbishop Tutu said that as he became increasingly frail, they saw a man distressed by South AfricaтАЩs enduring social and economic inequality. In the past two years, the coronavirus pandemic and resulting lockdowns have further exacerbated poverty, bringing unemployment to record levels.

Under Covid-19 restrictions, at a public viewing site erected in the Grand Parade, Cape TownтАЩs main public square, barely 100 people gathered to watch the service on a big screen. Those who braved the rain said they wanted to say goodbye to a тАЬgreat man,тАЭ like Laurence and Joslyn Vlotman, who brought an umbrella and small camp stool. But many, like Meg Jordi, sat on the ground.

Michael Jatto, a British national on vacation in South Africa from England, took his two daughters to the square to learn about the archbishop тАФ тАЬfor us as Africans, for our children to see a great man being shown in a positive light.тАЭ

For many South Africans who attended Christian and interfaith services in the days leading up to the funeral, there was a collective sense that South Africa had lost its moral compass. Some, though, found hope in the renewed focus on Archbishop TutuтАЩs life and legacy.

тАЬI feel weтАЩve gained in the way that the country, the government, the church has magnified him and held him up,тАЭ said Nikki Lomba, who watched from behind a barrier with her mother, Brita Lomba, as the archbishopтАЩs coffin was driven away in a hearse. тАЬI feel weтАЩve gained more hope, and at a very pivotal moment learned a lot in his passing.тАЭ

Zanele Mji contributed reporting.

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