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Tutu:
the courage of his compassion
Mail &
Guardian (SA)
October 06, 2006
http://www.chico.mweb.co.za/art/2006/2006oct/061006-tutu.html
Heidi Holland reviews Rabble-Rouser
For Peace: The authorised biography of Desmond Tutu
Rabble-Rouser For Peace: The authorised
biography of Desmond Tutu by John Allen (Rider)
If Desmond Tutu had become Archbishop
of Canterbury -- which a new book about him claims the Queen’s counsellors
in London were considering in 1990 -- the Church of England might
have struck a deal over gay and lesbian rights by now, but South
Africa would have missed some crucial signposts to the promised
land.
Rabble-Rouser for Peace, Tutu’s biography
by his former press secretary John Allen, charts the diminutive
archbishop’s unique influence on South Africa’s fledgling democracy.
It traces the life of the sickly child who, after long periods in
hospital coughing blood and thinking he was about to die, decided
to become a doctor to study his disease, TB. His father, a headmaster,
couldn’t afford the university fees, however, so Tutu followed him
into teaching and then, quitting in protest against apartheid education,
drifted into the priesthood.
His mentor was the radical British
cleric Trevor Huddleston, a neighbour in Sophiatown, who spotted
Desmond’s leadership skills and encouraged him to pursue theological
training at King’s College, London. Bishop Trev, as Huddleston was
known by countless activists, worked behind the scenes with Church
of England supremo Robert Runcie to ensure that their chosen one
ascended the Church of South Africa hierarchy.
Tutu and his wife Leah loved England
and might have accepted the Canterbury offer had it materialised.
They couldn’t help noticing that blacks were still a curiosity in
the English countryside in the Sixties: one of their four children,
Trevor, was once asked in a playground how his mother knew when
he was dirty. Tutu endeared himself to the British congregants he
met while studying for his master’s by standing outside the church
shouting, "Roll up, roll up for your holy handshake."
He became the first black Dean of Johannesburg
in 1975, a controversial choice whose sense of fun, infectious laughter
and love of the pastoral ministry combined with formidable powers
of persuasion to make him a natural leader of the South African
Council of Churches three years later. At the time, the council
was one of the few forums for black dissent in the country. Tutu
was fluent in six of the country’s languages and "intuitively
felt the plight of the weak and burnt with outrage at abuses of
power by the strong", says Allen, who worked with Tutu for
30 years.
With virtually the entire struggle
leadership either in prison or in exile during the Eighties, Tutu
kept his distance from the political process but never failed to
challenge injustice and oppression. One of his techniques in controlling
dangerous street confrontations during the township turmoil of the
Eighties and, later, the transitional violence preceding the country’s
first democratic election, was to poke fun at the police to diffuse
the fury.
He became convinced that outside intervention
was the key to conquering apartheid. Winning the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1984 effectively spread his non-violence message throughout the
world. Allen says it was awarded to Tutu ahead of Neslon Mandela
partly to protect the archbishop from arrest. Tutu noted at the
time: "One day no one was listening. The next, I was an oracle."
His widely televised rescue the following year of a police informer
facing a grisly death by "necklacing" was seized by premier
PW Botha as an opportunity to declare a state of emergency: it also
won Tutu universal admiration for his courage.
Having inherited not only compassion
from his mother but African spirituality from his culture, Tutu
believed the latter could equip victims of injustice to realise
that the oppressor needed help as surely as the oppressed, and perhaps
lead to the recovered humanity of both. Long before his colourful
chairmanship of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which
offered a divided amnesty in exchange for truth and healing in place
of retribution, Tutu nurtured the idea of dialogue as the means
to accommodate enemies. A fast talker himself, he spent nearly 30
years warning about an impending bloodbath, confronting the police
state, keeping peace on the streets and drumming up international
support for economic sanctions. Defiantly outspoken on behalf of
blacks, he was firmly in favour of reconciliation with whites. Forgiveness,
an understudied phenomenon worldwide, became the cornerstone of
his ministry once the TRC got underway in 1996.
If Tutu wept too often for some and
sprang into the limelight too eagerly for others, he used his status
as God’s showman to dazzling effect. During his years at Bishopscourt,
where Nelson Mandela spent his first night of freedom and the two
talked for the first time, Tutu became the world’s most prominent
religious leader to champion gay and lesbian rights. Often the victim
of verbal abuse and death threats, he was once asked if he ever
feared for his life. Shaking his head vigorously, Tutu quipped:
"If I’m doing God’s work, he should jolly well look after me."
In post-apartheid South Africa, Tutu
immediately asserted the church’s independence from the ruling party.
Having travelled extensively in Africa, he said he was appalled
that the victims of social injustice frequently made others suffer
similarly. "It pains me to have to admit that there is less
freedom … in most of independent Africa than there was during the
much-maligned colonial days." Alongside Nelson Mandela, Tutu
condemned Robert Mugabe’s brutality in Zimbabwe and constantly urged
the ANC to care for victims of Aids. When no echoes came from the
South African government and Mandela retreated from public life,
Tutu began to speak out, challenging the powerful and providing
a lone voice for the voiceless once more.
Rabble-Rouser for Peace at
396 pages is a well-written, deeply researched and a at times too
detailed tribute to one of the world’s moral guardians.
Heidi Holland’s new book, The Colour
of Murder (Penguin), is a true crime story that looks at racism
and violence, the enduring fault lines in South African life.
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