Cathedral bells toll for South Africa's anti-apartheid hero Tutu
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[December 27, 2021]
By Wendell Roelf
CAPE TOWN (Reuters) -South Africans
remembered anti-apartheid hero Archbishop Desmond Tutu with cathedral
bells, flowers and warm words on Monday, a day after he died in a Cape
Town nursing home aged 90.
Tutu, a Nobel laureate who had preached against the tyranny of the white
minority, was revered by Black and white South Africans alike as the
nation's moral conscience.
His passing prompted an outpouring of tributes worldwide, including from
U.S. President Joe Biden and his predecessors Barack Obama and Jimmy
Carter, Britain's Queen Elizabeth, Pope Francis and the foundation of
Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first Black president and friend of Tutu.
"Fighting for freedom from the trenches of South Africa required a
courage that cannot be described. Yet he stood resolute and fearless,
leading demonstrations cloaked in his flowing clerical robe...," said
Mandela's widow, Graca Machel.
The bells of St George's Cathedral tolled for 10 minutes at noon local
time on Monday, a homage set to be repeated every day until Friday. Tutu
led numerous campaigns and marches against apartheid from St George's
steps.
The Archbishop of Cape Town, Thabo Makgoba, asked all who heard the
bells "to pause their busy schedules for a moment in tribute" to Tutu.
Mourners laid flowers outside what is known as the "People's Cathedral"
and a powerful symbol of democracy. Black and white portraits of Tutu
were attached to a fence and five condolence books were available for
mourners who braved the wet weather.
"You fought the good fight, you inspired us to continue the fight for
peace in the world," read one message signed by Noel and Alfreda.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said in a national address late
on Sunday that flags would be flown at half-mast nationwide and at South
African diplomatic missions abroad until Tutu's funeral, which is set
for Saturday.
LOVE AND LAUGHTER
"His heart was big enough to hold the whole world in love," Tutu's
daughter Mpho Tutu van Furth said of her father in an interview for the
Trouw newspaper in the Netherlands, where she lives and works as an
Anglican priest.
"He was in the company of the most powerful people on earth and he sat
with the smallest, the weakest, the poorest and the neediest. He did it
with the same love and laugh," she said of Tutu, who was known for his
infectious giggle.
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Mourners pay their respects to the late Archishop Desmond Tutu
outside St Georges cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa, December
26. 2021. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings
Cape Town's city hall and the Table
Mountain which rises above the city will be illuminated every night
this week in purple, the colour of Tutu's clerical robes.
Tutu won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 in recognition of his
non-violent opposition to white minority rule. A decade later, he
witnessed the end of that regime and chaired a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to unearth the atrocities committed under
it.
He later called the Black political elite to account with as much
feistiness as he had the Afrikaners, but his enduring spirit of
reconciliation always shone through and he never stopped fighting
for a "Rainbow Nation".
The Diocese of Pretoria and the South African Council of Churches
will hold a memorial service in the capital, Pretoria, on Wednesday.
That evening, Cape Town will also host a special tribute at its city
hall, with representatives of Tutu's family, his foundation and
various faiths and tribes in attendance.
On Friday, Archbishop Tutu will lie in state at St George's ahead of
Saturday's funeral service, which will be led by Archbishop Makgoba.
Tutu's ashes will be interred in an ossuary behind the pulpit, in
accordance with his wishes, the Dean of St George's Cathedral,
Michael Weeder, told a news conference alongside Makgoba on Monday.
Makgoba said a list of possible attendees ran to as many as 500
names, but added that COVID-19 regulations limiting funerals to a
maximum of 100 people must be respected.
"Only a fraction of those who want to be there can be accommodated,"
he said, urging others to pay their respects at services to be held
in churches and cathedrals around the country.
(Addtitional reporting by Jody Khan and Shafiek Tassiem in Cape
Town, Emma Rumney in Johannesburg and Stephanie van den Berg in
AmsterdamWriting by Emma Rumney; Editing by Bernadette Baum and
Gareth Jones)
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