Anti-apartheid campaigner Archbishop Desmond Tutu has died, aged 90.
The death of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate and veteran of South Africa’s struggle against white minority rule was confirmed by the presidency on Sunday.
“The passing of Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu is another chapter of bereavement in our nation’s farewell to a generation of outstanding South Africans who have bequeathed us a liberated South Africa,” President Cyril Ramaphosa said.
Tutu, the former Archbishop of Cape Town, won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize for his work in trying to reconcile warring communities during apartheid.
He is probably the best known figure internationally to oppose apartheid, along with Nelson Mandela.
Tutu’s death comes just weeks after that of South Africa’s last apartheid-era president, FW de Clerk, who died at the age of 85.
Archbishop Tutu has died at the age of 90
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During the 1980s, when the ruling party cracked down on opposition forces, Tutu twice had his passport revoked and was jailed following a protest march.
Throughout his life Tutu was a tireless campaigner for human rights, continuing his work long after South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994.
He campaigned against HIV/Aids, tuberculosis, poverty, racism, xenophobia, sexism, homophobia and transphobia.
His relationship with Mandela ran deep, having introduced the future president to the crowds on the Grand Parade in Cape Town in February 1990 following his release from prison.
Mandela spent his first night of freedom at Tutu’s home.
Four years later, Tutu blessed Mandela at his inauguration as the country’s first democratically elected president.
“Like falling in love” is how Tutu described voting in the country’s 1994 election, a remark that captured both his puckish humour and his profound emotions after decades fighting apartheid.
The outspoken cleric was considered the nation’s conscience by both Black and white, an enduring testament to his faith and spirit of reconciliation in a divided nation.
Tutu and Mandela on World Aids Day in 2001
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He preached against the tyranny of white minority and even after its end, he never wavered in his fight for a fairer South Africa, calling the black political elite to account with as much feistiness as he had the white Afrikaners.
In his final years, he regretted that his dream of a “Rainbow Nation” had not yet come true..
Just five feet five inches (1.68 metres) tall and with an infectious giggle, Tutu was a moral giant.
He used his high-profile role in the Anglican Church to highlight the plight of black South Africans.
Asked on his retirement as Archbishop of Cape Town in 1996 if he had any regrets, Tutu said: “The struggle tended to make one abrasive and more than a touch self-righteous.
“I hope that people will forgive me any hurts I may have caused them.”
Talking and travelling tirelessly throughout the 1980s, Tutu became the face of the anti-apartheid movement abroad while many of the leaders of the rebel African National Congress (ANC), such as Mandela, were behind bars.
“Our land is burning and bleeding and so I call on the international community to apply punitive sanctions against this government,” he said in 1986.
Even as governments ignored the call, he helped rouse grassroots campaigns around the world that fought for an end to apartheid through economic and cultural boycotts.
Former hardline white president P.W. Botha asked Tutu in a letter in March 1988 whether he was working for the kingdom of God or for the kingdom promised by the then-outlawed and now ruling ANC.
Among his most painful tasks was delivering graveside corations for Black people who had died violently during the struggle against white domination.
“We are tired of coming to funerals, of making speeches week after week. It is time to stop the waste of human lives,” he once said.
Tutu holds a press conference in London back in 1984
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Tutu met Bob Geldof during his campaign to push the G8
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Tutu said his stance on apartheid was moral rather than political.
“It’s easier to be a Christian in South Africa than anywhere else, because the moral issues are so clear in this country,” he once said.
“Sometimes strident, often tender, never afraid and seldom without humour, Desmond Tutu’s voice will always be the voice of the voiceless,” is how Mandela, who died in December 2013, described his friend.
While Mandela introduced South Africa to democracy, Tutu headed the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that laid bare the terrible truths of the war against white rule.
Some of the heartrending testimony moved him publicly to tears.
But Tutu was as tough on the new democracy as he was on South Africa’s apartheid rulers.
He castigated the new ruling elite for boarding the “gravy train” of privilege and chided Mandela for his long public affair with Graca Machel, whom he eventually married.
In his Truth Commission report, Tutu refused to treat the excesses of the ANC in the fight against white rule any more gently than those of the apartheid government.
Even in his twilight years, he never stopped speaking his mind, condemning President Jacob Zuma over allegations of corruption surrounding a $23 million security upgrade to his home.
In 2014, he admitted he did not vote for the ANC, citing moral grounds.
“As an old man, I am sad because I had hoped that my last days would be days of rejoicing, days of praising and commending the younger people doing the things that we hoped so very much would be the case,” Tutu said in June 2014.
Tutu met Prince Harry, Meghan and Archie during one of his last public appearances in 2019
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In December 2003, he rebuked his government for its support for Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, despite growing criticism over his human rights record.
Tutu drew a parallel between Zimbabwe’s isolation and South Africa’s battle against apartheid.
“We appealed for the world to intervene and interfere in South Africa’s internal affairs. We could not have defeated apartheid on our own,” Tutu said.
“What is sauce for the goose must be sauce for the gander too.”
He also criticised South African President Thabo Mbeki for his public questioning of the link between HIV and AIDS, saying Mbeki’s international profile had been tarnished.
A schoolteacher’s son, Tutu was born in Klerksdorp, a conservative town west of Johannesburg, on Oct. 7, 1931.
The family moved to Sophiatown in Johannesburg, one of the commercial capital’s few mixed-race areas, subsequently demolished under apartheid laws to make way for the white suburb of Triomf – Triumph in Afrikaans.
Always a passionate student, Tutu first worked as a teacher.
But he said he had become infuriated with the system of educating Blacks, once described by a South African prime minister as aimed at preparing them for their role in society as servants.
Tutu quit teaching in 1957 and decided to join the church, studying first at St. Peter’s Theological College in Johannesburg.
Tutu and Harry also met in 2015 at the offices of The Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation
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Tutu was ordained as a priest 50 years ago
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He was ordained a priest in 1961 and continued his education at King’s College in London.
After four years abroad, he returned to South Africa, where his sharp intellect and charismatic preaching saw him rise through lecturing posts to become Anglican Dean of Johannesburg in 1975, which was when his activism started taking shape.
“I realised that I had been given a platform that was not readily available to many Blacks, and most of our leaders were either now in chains or in exile.
“And I said: ‘Well, I’m going to use this to seek to try to articulate our aspirations and the anguishes of our people’,” he told a reporter in 2004.
By now too prominent and globally respected to be thrust laside by the apartheid government, Tutu used his appointment as Secretary-General of the South African Council of Churches in 1978 to call for sanctions against his country.
He was named the first Black Archbishop of Cape Town in 1986, becoming the head of the Anglican Church, South Africa’s fourth largest.
He would retain that position until 1996.
In retirement he battled prostate cancer and largely withdrew from public life.
In one of his last public appearances, he hosted Britain’s Prince Harry, his wife Meghan and their four-month-old son Archie at his charitable foundation in Cape Town in September 2019, calling them a “genuinely caring” couple.
1931 – Desmond Tutu is born in Klerksdorp, a town around 170 km (105 miles) to the west of Johannesburg.
1943 – Tutu’s Methodist family joins the Anglican Church.
1947 – Tutu falls ill with tuberculosis while studying at a secondary school near Sophiatown, Johannesburg. He befriends a priest and serves in his church after recovering from illness.
1948 – The white National Party launches apartheid in the run-up to 1948 national elections. It wins popular support among white voters who want to maintain their dominance over the Black
majority.
1955 – Tutu marries Nomalizo Leah Shenxane and begins teaching at a high school in Johannesburg where his father is the headmaster.
1958 – Tutu quits the school, refusing to be part of a teaching system that promotes inequality against Black students. He joins the priesthood.
1962 – Tutu moves to Britain to study theology at King’s College London.
1966 – Tutu moves back to South Africa and starts teaching theology at a seminary in the Eastern Cape. He also begins making his views against apartheid known.
1975 – Tutu becomes the first Black Anglican Dean of Johannesburg.
1980 – As general secretary of the South African Council of Churches, Tutu leads a delegation of church leaders to Prime Minister PW Botha, urging him to end apartheid. Although nothing comes of the meeting it is a historical moment where a Black leader confronts a senior white government official. The government confiscates Tutu’s passport.
1984 – Tutu is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to bring about the end of white minority rule.
1985 – Tutu becomes the first Black Bishop of Johannesburg. He publicly endorses an economic boycott of South Africa and civil disobedience as a way to dismantle apartheid.
1986 – Tutu becomes the first Black person appointed as Bishop of Cape Town and head of the Anglican Church of the Province of Southern Africa. With other church leaders he mediates conflicts between Black protesters and government security forces.
1990 – State President FW de Klerk unbans the African National Congress (ANC) and announces plans to release Nelson Mandela from prison.
1991 – Apartheid laws and racist restrictions are repealed and power-sharing talks start between the state and 16 anti-apartheid groups.
1994 – After Mandela sweeps to power at the helm of the ANC in the country’s first democratic elections, Tutu coins the term “Rainbow Nation” to describe the coming together of various races in post-apartheid South Africa.
1994 – Mandela asks Tutu to chair the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that was set up to listen to, record and in some cases grant amnesty to perpetrators of human right violations under apartheid.
1996 – Tutu retires from the church to focus solely on the commission. He continues his activism, advocating for equality and reconciliation and is later named Archbishop Emeritus.
1997 – Tutu is diagnosed with prostate cancer. He has since been hospitalised to treat recurring infections.
2011 – The Dalai Lama inaugurates the annual Desmond Tutu International Peace Lecture but does so via satellite link after the South African government denies the Tibetan spiritual leader a visa to attend.
2013 – Tutu makes outspoken comments about the ANC. He says he will no longer vote for the party because it had done a bad job addressing inequality, violence and corruption.
2013 – Dubbed “the moral compass of the nation”, Tutu declares his support for gay rights, saying he would never “worship a God who is homophobic”.
2021 – A frail-looking Tutu is wheeled into his former parish at St George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, which used to be a safe haven for anti-apartheid activists, for a special thanksgiving service marking his 90th birthday.
Dec. 26, 2021 – Tutu dies in Cape Town, aged 90.
Four years earlier the archbishop praised the prince for his work with AIDS orphans in Lesotho, a tiny landlocked country in the centre of South Africa where 23 per cent of the population has HIV.
He said: “I am very touched by your commitment to Lesotho.
“I taught at the university there and became Bishop of Lesotho.
“It has always had a very soft spot in our hearts, just wonderful that you and the English are helping, thank you very much.”
In 2009 Barack Obama described Tutu as “a crusader for freedom, a spiritual leader … and a respected statesman (who) has become a symbol of kindness and hope far beyond the borders of his native land.”
Tutu married Leah in 1955. They had four children and several grandchildren, and homes in Cape Town and Soweto township near Johannesburg.
Tutu was described as a “crusader for freedom”
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Following his death tributes flooded in for Tutu.
President Ramaphosa called him “a patriot without equal; a leader of principle and pragmatism who gave meaning to the biblical insight that faith without works is dead.
“A man of extraordinary intellect, integrity and invincibility against the forces of apartheid, he was also tender and vulnerable in his compassion for those who had suffered oppression, injustice and violence under apartheid, and oppressed and downtrodden people around the world.”
Cyril Ramaphosa, chair of the African National Congress, said: “The passing of Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu is another chapter of bereavement in our nation’s farewell to a generation of outstanding South Africans who have bequeathed us a liberated South Africa.”
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