Tag Archives: Desmond Tutu

Desmond Tutu’s ashes buried in Cape Town cathedral

Desmond Tutu’s ashes buried in Cape Town cathedral

Desmond Tutu’s ashes buried in Cape Town cathedral

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu was laid to rest at dawn on Sunday in the Cape Town cathedral where he once preached against the brutal white-minority regime.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Tutu died a week ago, aged 90, after a life spent fighting injustice.

His ashes were “interred at St. George’s Cathedral in a private family service early today”, an Anglican Church statement said.

Archbishop Thabo Makgoba placed his remains under an inscribed memorial stone before the high altar.

He urged South Africans to “use this opportunity to turn a new page.

“Let us commit ourselves… to the radical, the revolutionary change that he advocated,” Makgoba said.

“Let us live as simply as he lived, exemplified by his pine coffin with rope handles.”

Some 20 members of Tutu’s family, led by his widow “Mama Leah” were present.

Famed for his modesty, Tutu had left instructions for a simple, no-frills funeral with a cheap coffin, followed by an eco-friendly flameless cremation.

Family, friends, clergy, and politicians had attended a requiem mass on Saturday with President Cyril Ramaphosa leading the tributes.

“Our departed father was a crusader in the struggle for freedom, for justice, for equality, and for peace, not just in South Africa… but around the world as well,” said Ramaphosa.

“While our beloved (Nelson Mandela) was the father of our democracy, Archbishop Tutu was the spiritual father of our new nation”, lauding him as “our moral compass and national conscience”.

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

“What does the Lord require of you but to pursue justice, to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God?” (Micah 6:8)

In Desmond Mpilo Tutu this threefold cord was interwoven in a long, lived authenticity. That is why we loved him and respected him and valued him so deeply. Small in physical stature, he was a giant among us morally and spiritually. His faith was authentic, not counterfeit or half-hearted. He lived it, even at great cost to himself, with an inclusive, all-embracing love. His friend, Nelson Mandela, put it perfectly when he said: “Sometimes strident, often tender, never afraid and seldom without humour, Desmond Tutu’s voice will always be the voice of the voiceless.”

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

I come here today, in my octogenarian years, sensitive to the awesomeness of the occasion, which is likely to catch the tearful and thankful mood of this our nation and of the entire world. I come in response to the expressed wish of my archbishop and friend, for it was he who asked me, some years ago, to do this at his funeral. How could I refuse such a request, such an honour?

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

First, let me say a few words to the chief mourner among us. My dear Leah, Gogo Emeritus of our church, distinguished member of its Order of Simon of Cyrene, you and I are in a close solidarity in the loss of a much-loved spouse. I therefore know something of what you must now be going through, though each person should be free to grieve in whatever way is most appropriate for them. Many times you wiped away the tears of your husband for, as we all know, he cried very easily and, in the life of our country, both past and present, he had much to cry about, not to mention the wider world which seems in many ways to be tearing itself apart. Today we are here to try, in a small way, to wipe away your tears, though tears are, of course, a very necessary part of our grieving. Allow me to give you, and your family, a comment which was sent to me for my comfort and which I found helpful within the strange twists and turns of my grieving:

“Grief is not a disorder, a disease or a sign of weakness. It is an emotional, physical and spiritual necessity, the price you pay for love. The only cure for grief is to grieve.” (Earl Grollman)

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

Desmond and I became close in an unlikely partnership at a truly critical time in the life of our country from 1989 – 1996, he as Archbishop of Cape Town and I as his deputy when, as Bishop of Natal, I was elected by my brother bishops to be also what is called “Dean of the Province”. I was asked during a pastoral visit we made to Jerusalem what this cumbersome ecclesiastical title meant. My answer, on the spur of the moment, was that it meant “number two to Tutu”. The nickname stuck, but more importantly, at a deeper level our partnership struck a chord perhaps in the hearts and minds of many people: a dynamic black leader and his white deputy in the dying years of apartheid; and hey presto, the heavens did not collapse. We were a foretaste, if you like, of what could be in our wayward, divided nation.

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

“What does the Lord require of you but to pursue justice, to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God?” Allow me briefly to unpack each of these qualities in relation to our esteemed Archbishop.

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

Pursue justice

Desmond was not on some crusade of personal aggrandisement or egotism, though he often and disarmingly admitted that he loved to be loved, and what is wrong with that? Do we not all love to be loved? It is a human craving from the moment we are born. But no: Desmond’s response to grave injustice came from the depths of his being and often in response to what he called ‘the divine nudge’. Listen to what his favourite prophet, Jeremiah, wrote: “There is in my heart, as it were, a burning fire shut up in my bones, and I am weary with holding it in, and I cannot.” (Jeremiah 20:9) That is how Desmond Tutu lived and ministered in a situation of systemic and often brutal injustice in his own beloved country. Nor did the fire in his breast die out in his years of retirement and old age, though he was thrilled with the coming of democracy in 1994. “Watch out, watch out, watch out!” he warned sternly when the new government stalled expediently in giving a visa to his friend and fellow Peace Laureate, the Dalai Lama, at the time of the Arch’s 80th birthday celebration. He was not similarly turned down when he went to Dharamsala in India for the Dalai Lama’s 80th birthday and, together, they produced a remarkable book called “The Book of Joy”, which is a spiritual classic for our time and, indeed, for all time: a book crafted by deep and humorous conversation between a Buddhist and a Christian, and compiled beautifully by Douglas Abrams who is a Jew. There is a profound pursuit of a just order in this fine product, namely a religious just order amidst so much shameful intolerance in today’s world. Those who have ears to hear, let them hear.

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

Love kindness

This was our ‘Arch’ at his very best. His was not a harsh, ideological quest for justice. Always it was grounded in mercy, in ‘hesed’ (to use the Hebrew word), in an enduring loving-kindness: the gentle touch, the forgiving heart, the warm smile – ah yes, the warm smile. Remember his fine book on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, that seminal body which he chaired; it was titled “No Future without Forgiveness”. How could someone who had suffered so much hostility and disdain in his own country settle for such a conviction, such magnanimity? It was because all that he stood for and strove for was undergirded by a spirit of mercy towards everyone. Did you ever receive from him a phone call or a gift of flowers, a card, a handwritten letter or an email? When my wife of 57 years died on All Souls Day, 2016 he was on the phone to me, despite great physical frailty, to comfort me and to offer, as he would say, a little prayer from the heart. Desmond was quite at ease praying on the telephone with others. Actually, he prayed anywhere and everywhere, not only in churches and chapels. He so wanted to be at Dorrie’s funeral and was truly pained that ill-health prevented him. The flowers, of course, arrived.

Walk humbly with your God

Here is the mystery of the interior pilgrimage of the soul. There were three Ps about our Archbishop; he was the prophet, the pastor and the pray-er. What many perhaps did not realise was that the prayer undergirded, guided and prompted all the rest. A daily Eucharist was his custom, regardless of the circumstances; I remember having one with him in Frankfurt airport when we waited for a connecting flight. It is utterly appropriate that his funeral service today is immersed in what we call a Requiem Eucharist, and it would be his wish that all of us be free to receive the sacred body and blood of Christ at it. Desmond was not only immersed in the liturgical prayer of the church; he was also up at four in the morning each day to pray – to meditate, to contemplate and to intercede. In his intercessory work, he would engage in what Leah called a Cook’s Tour around the whole world. In his prayer the world was his parish, and surely that was appropriate for a holder of the Nobel Peace Prize.

So I give you, in memory of this holy and very human man, this humane leader, a threefold cord which we too can try to emulate: pursue justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God.

Photos: Archbishop Desmond Tutu laid to rest

I conclude this intertwined sermon and eulogy with the words of a personal Praise Song, looking back on our Arch’s remarkable life and held in awe by his going from us now:

Yo!
Desmond Mpilo Tutu
Born and raised where the gentle Batswana live,
Land of the cameeldoring tree and the wide, wide vlakte;
his mother a domestic worker, his father a teacher;
Polio survivor, T B survivor, visited unforgettably in hospital
by one Trevor Huddleston C R,
Bright child, living in the shadow of the great injustice.

Raised through sickness to a priestly calling,
finding the fire in your breast that prevented silence.
Articulate scholar, prophet, pastor, pray-er,
preacher of passion with arms stretched out,
diminutive person making presidents tremble.
Small person of the past becoming great in the unfolding purposes of God.

Yo!
Mbishobhi,
Learning the art in mountain kingdom, being greeted ‘Khotso, Ntate’,
visiting parishes in Basotho blanket astride a hardy horse.
Learning the harder way in the city of gold,
the bitter irony of red carpets abroad and icy stares back home.
Learning to lean on God and the safety valve of an irrepressible, self-
deprecating humour.

Voice of the muted multitude, son of the dark mysterious land,
Called at the height of crisis to the Cape of Storms to transform it into the Cape of Good Hope;
Mbishobhi Omkhulu!

Take rest at last, lala kahle, our dear friend the Arch.
You have tended the wounds of noble strife, the wounds of Ubuntu;
enter now into the full embrace of the great and generous God you served.

Bishop Michael Nuttall

ISSUED BY THE OFFICE OF THE ANGLICAN ARCHBISHOP OF CAPE TOWN

Desmond Tutu deserves to be celebrated, says long-time friend Canon Sipho Masemola

Desmond Tutu deserves to be celebrated, says long-time friend Canon Sipho Masemola

Desmond Tutu deserves to be celebrated, says long-time friend Canon Sipho Masemola

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu’s long-time friend from theological college, Canon Sipho Masemola said that the Arch was a living example of what it truly meant to be Christian and his remarkable life deserved to be celebrated.

People gathered for a memorial service at St Mary’s Cathedral in Johannesburg on Thursday to honour Tutu, who died at the age of 90 on Boxing Day.

Canon Masemola said that Tutu was spiritually awakened long before he started studying.

“His spirituality had already developed even before he came to theological college,” Masemola said.

Masemola described the Arch as one of a kind and said that people should try and emulate his selflessness.

“I think he deserves to be celebrated. He is one of the bishops who became an example of what it means to be a Christian,” Masemola said.

The Arch is lying in repose in Cape Town ahead of his funeral service at St George’s Cathedral on Saturday.

Memorial services for Desmond Tutu to take place in Joburg, Cape Town

Memorial services for Desmond Tutu to take place in Joburg, Cape Town

Memorial services for Desmond Tutu to take place in Joburg, Cape Town

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu is being honoured on Wednesday. Several memorial services are being held. The Arch died on Sunday at the age of 90.

An ecumenical service will be held in Johannesburg where Tutu served as the first black bishop in 1985. The Diocese of the Highveld will hold a communion service in Benoni on the East Rand.

At Tutu’s Orlando West home on Vilakai Street, Joburg Mayor Mpho Phalatse will lead a candlelight service.

In Cape Town, the City will hold an interfaith service in his honour. Tutu will be laid to rest on Saturday after a requiem mass service in St George’s Cathedral. His body will be cremated and his ashes interred in the cathedral’s mausoleum, according to his wishes.

Latest: Archbishop Desmond Tutu to be cremated

Latest: Archbishop Desmond Tutu to be cremated

Latest: Archbishop Desmond Tutu to be cremated

For the remainder of this week, the bells of the Cathedral will be rung every day for 10 minutes, starting at midday.

The funeral of South Africa’s anti-apartheid icon Archbishop Desmond Tutu will take place at the St George’s Cathedral in Cape Town on Saturday, 1 January 2022.

St George’s, also known as the ‘People’s Cathedral’, played a vital role in the resistance against apartheid.
Thabo Cecil Makgoba, the South African Anglican archbishop of Cape Town, announced on Monday that Tutu will be cremated.

Bishop Michael Nuttal will officiate Archbishop Tutu’s funeral service.

While more than 400 people said they would want to be in attendance on Saturday, Makgoba encouraged people to adhere to Covid-19 protocols and watch the funeral procession via live stream instead.
Designated spot for Tutu’s ashes

Speaking at the press conference, the Dean of the Cathedral Michael Weeder said Archbishop Tutu’s ashes will be interred at the mausoleum at the Cathedral, in a designated spot.

Those who wish to pay respect to the late Archbishop while he lies in state may do so on Friday. However, access will be limited to 200 people due to Covid-19 restrictions.

For the remainder of this week, the bells of the Cathedral will be rung every day for 10 minutes, starting at midday. Makgoba asks all who hear the bells to take a moment and pay tribute to the late Archbishop.

A memorial service will be held at the Diocese of Pretoria and the South African Council of Churches on Wednesday.

A purple tribute to Tutu

Meanwhile, Cape Town will be drenched in purple to honour Tutu’s legacy.

Table Mountain, City Hall and St George’s Cathedral will be illuminated in purple light to remember “Cape Town’s greatest resident and all that he stood for”, mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said in a statement.

“I hope also that the image will be a reminder to the world of the great challenges South Africa has overcome, of the great people who helped us to overcome those challenges, and that by following in the Arch’s example, every one of us can also make a positive difference in the world,” Hill-Lewis said.

Mzansi react to Rasta’s portrait of Desmond Tutu

Mzansi react to Rasta’s portrait of Desmond Tutu

Mzansi react to Rasta’s portrait of Desmond Tutu

As usual, the infamous star real name Lebani Sirenje had the Twitter timeline in a flurry over his artwork.

Desmond Tutu sadly passed away on the morning of Boxing Day, 26 December 2021. But just a few short hours later, controversial artist Rasta had already revealed a portrait of the world-famous icon.

Whilst it’s unclear if Rasta painted the portrait on Boxing Day or prior to that, tweeps still had a field day dissecting the piece of art.

Many commented at the speed at which he produced his latest celebrity portrait.

World leaders pay tribute to Desmond Tutu

World leaders pay tribute to Desmond Tutu

World leaders pay tribute to Desmond Tutu

former Nigerian Vice president Atiku Abubakar, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Archbishop of Canterbury and other world leaders have paid tribute to South African bishop and human rights activist Desmond Tutu who passed on Sunday.

Peoples Gazette had earlier reported that Mr Tutu, a retired Anglican archbishop, died on Sunday morning in Cape Town South Africa.

Paying tribute to the late Archbishop in a tweet the UK prime minister said he was deeply saddened by Mr Tutu’s death.

He said the late archbishop was a critical figure in the struggle to create a new South Africa.

“I am deeply saddened to hear of the death of Archbishop Desmond Tutu. He was a critical figure in the fight against apartheid and in the struggle to create a new South Africa – and will be remembered for his spiritual leadership and irrepressible good humour,” Mr Johnson wrote.

Also, the Archbishop of Canterbury in a statement said Mr Tutu’s love transformed the lives of politicians and priests, township dwellers, and world leaders.

He said the late archbishop “embodied the hope and joy that were the foundations of his life.”

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa had while announcing his death paid tribute to the late social activist.

He described Mr Tutu as a leader of principle and pragmatism who gave meaning to the biblical insight that faith without works is dead.

On his part, former Mr Abubakar said his departure “on such a significant day befits the treasure that the life you lived was.”

Also, Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine said he was saddened by the news of the Archbishop’s demise.

“The news of the passing of Archbishop Desmond Tutu is very sad. A giant has fallen. We thank God for his life- a purposeful life truly lived in the service of humanity. May his soul rest in peace. Condolences to all people world-over who were touched by his life and ministry,” Bobi Wine wrote.

Described by political elites and observers as the moral conscience of his nation, Mr Tutu was born in Klerksdorp, South-West Johannesburg where he trained as a teacher before becoming an Anglican priest

The anti-apartheid activist was diagnosed with prostate cancer in the late 1990s and had in recent years been frequently hospitalised for infections associated with his ailment.