Desmond Tutu
Famous as | Outspoken critic of apartheid |
Born on | 07 October 1931 |
Born in | Klerksdorp, South Africa |
Nationality | South Africa |
Works & Achievements | South African activist, Noble Prize winner, former archbishop of Cape Town |
Tutu became the voice of the 'voiceless' black people, who suffered from racial discrimination in South Africa. His lectures and writings at home and abroad played a significant role in solving the issue of apartheid. Apart from this, Desmond Tutu has organized several campaigns to fight AIDS, poverty and racism. The Noble laureate has compiled several books of his speeches and sayings. Desmond Tutu was the head of Truth and Reconciliation Commission and at present, is the chairperson of 'The Elders'.
Childhood
Born on 7th October 1931, in
Klerksdorp, as a Methodist, Desmond Tutu became an Anglican when his
family changed religions. He moved with his family to Johannesburg when
he was 12 years old. In Johannesburg, Tutu came across Anglican priest
Trevor Huddleston, who was strictly against apartheid, the system of
legal racial separation. Tutu was influenced by Huddleston and
considered the priest as his role model. Although Tutu wanted to become a
physician, his family could not afford the training. Hence, he decided
to follow the path of his father and chose teaching as his profession.
Education
Desmond Tutu studied at the Pretoria Bantu
Normal College, from 1951 through 1953, and pursued a diploma in
teaching. After completing the course, he went on to teach at
Johannesburg Bantu High School for three years, till 1957. Following the
implementation of Bantu Education Act 1953, which deteriorated the
standard of black education and reduced it to second rate, Tutu resigned
from the job, in protest of poor academic conditions of the black South
Africans.
Desmond Tutu then continued his studies and
pursued Theology at St Peter’s Theology College in Rosettenville.
Following in the footsteps of his role model and fellow activist Trevor
Huddleson, he became an Anglican priest in 1960. Tutu traveled to London
to continue further studies, where he earned his Bachelor’s and
Master’s Degree in Theology.
Career
After acquiring education, Desmond Tutu returned to South Africa.
He used his lectures to highlight the miserable conditions of the black
population in the country. Tutu served as a lecturer from 1970 to 1974,
at the University of Lesotho, Botswana. He was appointed as the
Anglican Dean of Johannesburg in 1975. He used his position to challenge
the white rule publicly. From 1976 to 1978, Tutu served as the Bishop
of Lesotho and in 1978, became the Secretary-General of South African
Council of Churches. After a year, he was chosen as the Archbishop of
Cape Town, South Africa. He became the first black Bishop of Johannesburg in 1985.
Personal Life
Desmond Tutu married Nomalizo Leah Shenxane in
1955. Their four children - Trevor Thamsanqa Tutu, Theresa Thandeka
Tutu, Naomi Nontombi Tutu and Mpho Andrea Tutu, studied at Waterford
Kamhlaba School, in Swaziland. Desmond Tutu was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer in 1997. Consequently, he became the patron of South African Prostate
Cancer Foundation, which was established in 2007. Tutu is a beholder of
a number of honorary degrees, earned from prestigious universities
across the world.
Tutu’s Fight Against Apartheid
Desmond Tutu was one of the outspoken critics of
apartheid - the system of legal racial separation. He used his position
as the Bishop of Lesotho to work against it. Students’ rebellion
against apartheid started in Soweto, in 1976. This protest came to be
known as ‘Soweto Riots’. Tutu played his part by supporting an
‘economic’ boycott of his country. He also fought against the racial
discrimination by constantly preaching reconciliation between different
parties associated with apartheid, through his writings and lectures at
home and abroad.
Later Life
On September 7, 1986, Desmond Tutu became the first black person to become the head of Anglican Church in South Africa.
He was invited to Birmingham, England, as part of Citywide Christian
Celebrations in 1989. His wife accompanied him to visit various
establishments, such as Nelson Mandela School in Sparkbrook. South Africa’s first multi-racial elections were held in 1994, when Nelson Mandela was elected as country’s first black President. He appointed Tutu as the chairperson of Truth & Reconciliation Commission (TRC).
In order to devote his time to the TRC, Tutu
took retirement from the position of Archbishop of Cape town, in 1996.
After a year, although he announced that he would undergo several months
of treatment for prostate cancer in the United States, he continued to
work for TRC. Tutu returned to United Kingdom in 2004 to serve as a
visiting professor at King’s College. In the present time, although he
is still suffering from cancer, he travels extensively across different
places and works for fair causes, in and out of his country.
Awards
Desmond Tutu’s extensive efforts to support
noble causes have fetched him a number of prestigious awards. Tutu was
awarded the highly coveted Noble Peace Prize in 1984, for his
contribution towards resolving the issue of apartheid. Three years
later, he was awarded the 'Pacem in Terris' Award. He won the 'Bishop
John T. Walker Distinguished Humanitarian Service Award' in 1992 and in
1999; Tutu was entitled to the 'Sydney Peace Prize'. He also won Gandhi
Peace Prize in 2005 and received the Lincoln Leadership Prize in 2008.
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