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Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. - Religion (3) - Nairaland

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Desmond Tutu's Ashes Buried Inside Church Floor (Pictures) / Funeral: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Lies In Repose At His Old Cathedral / Cape Town Drenched In Purple In Memory Of Archbishop Desmond Tutu (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Nobody: 9:02am On Dec 26, 2021
Rest on
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by cyborg44: 9:02am On Dec 26, 2021
Rip sir. Abeg make somebody post that meme where he hold his jaw with a disgusted look.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by dmbb: 9:04am On Dec 26, 2021
Is he dead? Is he supporting gay?
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by jericco1(m): 9:04am On Dec 26, 2021
Died at a good age.
RIP great man
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Sikariyelwa: 9:05am On Dec 26, 2021
The exit of an icon,a good man we in Africa will always remember him.He was a second of Nelson mandela.

1 Like

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by TUTU147: 9:07am On Dec 26, 2021
Rest in peace my Hero, Africa will surely miss you.Your ideology will continue with us.

2 Likes

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Mainman4: 9:08am On Dec 26, 2021
Rest well Man of God
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Btruth: 9:12am On Dec 26, 2021
Rest in peace sir
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by shakyum: 9:14am On Dec 26, 2021
samuel19222:
Rest on SN Desmond Tutu


Say no to oppression

SM
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Tinyemeka(m): 9:17am On Dec 26, 2021
Faller:
Na so everybody go die one day....

Thank God for life...Two years ago I was on the verge of suicide, I went to buy Sniper, the shop attendant told me my money is Not enough to afford suicide, I was like I'm so broke I can't even afford death, Well on my way home, I bought beans and bread, And I was very happy because bread and beans sweet pass sniper, I started thinking, so Na like dis I for leave bread and beans behind...Once again thank God for life

One day I go die Sha, but at least not by my own hand....

It is well with you bro.

It takes wisdom to appreciate the inevitability of life transition.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by baralatie(m): 9:23am On Dec 26, 2021
Gten:
May God rest his soul. Such a great man.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by JJBROS(m): 9:24am On Dec 26, 2021
Rest on my reverend Archbishop Desmond Tutu. May your soul find peace in the Bossom of Almighty God. Peace!
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by KennethEnyi(m): 9:25am On Dec 26, 2021
Faller:
Na so everybody go die one day....

Thank God for life...Two years ago I was on the verge of suicide, I went to buy Sniper, the shop attendant told me my money is Not enough to afford suicide, I was like I'm so broke I can't even afford death, Well on my way home, I bought beans and bread, And I was very happy because bread and beans sweet pass sniper, I started thinking, so Na like dis I for leave bread and

beans behind...Once again thank God for life

One day I go die Sha, but at least not by my own hand....






Whaaa….
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by atorioke(m): 9:28am On Dec 26, 2021
EmekaBlue:
Vatican lower your candles

A great Catholic has gone
I think he is Anglican. Episcopal.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by TMKsouth: 9:29am On Dec 26, 2021
embarassed embarassed embarassed cry cry cry

Lala Ngoxolo - RIP Arch.

1 Like

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Buharidgeneral: 9:33am On Dec 26, 2021
slawormiir:
Damnnn niggar

Rest in peace

90 years is a whole lot

I know a real niggar won't get to that age

He is always living life on the fast lane...he got police chasing him, smoking weed, bombing, keyboarding,drinking beer and banging pussy
All these for one person?

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by LordReed(m): 9:36am On Dec 26, 2021
Valar Morghulis. Rest in peace.

1 Like

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Nonexisting: 9:38am On Dec 26, 2021
When the white man came to us and said let us pray, he had the bible and we had the land. When we opened our eyes after the prayer, he had the land and we had the bible......Desmond Tutu. RIP senior man.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by eagleonearth(m): 9:39am On Dec 26, 2021
PrinceOfLagos:
Rip man of God
is the cassock or fight for freedom that makes him a man of God? Will a real man of God give out his daughter to another lady in marriage??

Think about it!!
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by ZUBY77(m): 9:40am On Dec 26, 2021
RIP SIR
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Nobody: 9:41am On Dec 26, 2021
May his soul rest in perfect peace. Amen.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by ofiko123(m): 9:41am On Dec 26, 2021
RIP to Archbishop Desmond tutu..
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by lesbiconverter: 9:43am On Dec 26, 2021
TimmyTen:
In 1978 Desmond Tutu was
appointed general
secretary of the South
African Council of
Churches and became a
leading spokesperson for
the rights of black South
Africans. During the 1980s
he played an unrivaled role
in drawing national and
international attention to
the iniquities of apartheid,
and in 1984 he won the
Nobel Prize for Peace for
his efforts.
Early Life
Desmond Mpilo Tutu was
born on October 7, 1931 in
Klerksdorp, South Africa.
His father was an
elementary school
principal and his mother
worked cooking and
cleaning at a school for the
blind. The South Africa of
Tutu's youth was rigidly
segregated, with black
Africans denied the right to
vote and forced to live only
in specific areas. Although
as a child Tutu understood
that he was treated worse
than white children based
on nothing other than the
color of his skin, he
resolved to make the best
of the situation and still
managed a happy
childhood.
"We knew, yes, we were
deprived," he later
recalled. "It wasn't the
same thing for white kids,
but it was as full a life as
you could make it. I mean,
we made toys for ourselves
with wires, making cars,
and you really were
exploding with joy!" Tutu
recalls one day when he
was out walking with his
mother when a white man,
a priest named Trevor
Huddleston, tipped his hat
to her—the first time he had
ever seen a white man pay
this respect to a black
woman. The incident made
a profound impression on
Tutu, teaching him that he
need not accept
discrimination and that
religion could be a
powerful tool for
advocating racial equality.
Tutu was a bright and
curious child with a
passion for reading. He
especially loved reading
comic strips as well as
Aesop's Fables and the
plays of Shakespeare. His
family moved to the capital
city of Johannesburg when
he was 12 years old, and it
was around that time that
Tutu contracted
tuberculosis and nearly
died. The experience
inspired his ambition to
become a medical doctor
and find a cure for the
disease. Tutu attended
Johannesburg Bantu High
School, a grossly
underfunded all-black
school where he
nevertheless received an
excellent education. "The
people who taught us were
very dedicated and they
inspired you to want to
emulate them and really to
become all that you could
become," Tutu
remembered. "They gave
you the impression that, in
fact, yeah, the sky is the
limit. You can, even with all
of the obstacles that are
placed in your way; you
can reach out to the stars."
Tutu graduated from high
school in 1950, and
although he had been
accepted into medical
school, his family could not
afford the expensive
tuition. Instead he accepted
a scholarship to study
education at Pretoria Bantu
Normal College and
graduated with his
teacher's certificate in
1953. He then continued on
to receive a bachelor's
degree from the University
of South Africa in 1954.
Upon his graduation from
university, Tutu returned to
his high school alma mater
to teach English and
history. "I tried to be what
my teachers had been to
me to these kids," he said,
"seeking to instill in them a
pride, a pride in
themselves. A pride in
what they were doing. A
pride that said they may
define you as so and so.
You aren't that. Make sure
you prove them wrong by
becoming what the
potential in you says you
can become."
Rise to Prominence
Nevertheless, Tutu became
increasingly frustrated
with the racism corrupting
all aspects of South African
life under apartheid. In
1948, when Tutu was 17
years old, the National
Party won control of the
government and codified
the nation's long-present
segregation and inequality
into the official, rigid policy
of apartheid. In 1953, the
government passed the
Bantu Education Act, a law
that lowered the standards
of education for black
South Africans to ensure
that they only learned what
was necessary for a life of
servitude. The government
spent one-tenth as much
money on the education of
a black student as on the
education of a white one,
and Tutu's overcrowded
classes often included as
many as 80 pupils. No
longer willing to participate
in an educational system
explicitly designed to
promote inequality, he quit
teaching in 1957.
The next year, in 1958, Tutu
enrolled at St. Peter's
Theological College in
Johannesburg. He was
ordained as an Anglican
deacon in 1960 and as a
priest in 1961. In 1962, Tutu
left South Africa to pursue
further theological studies
in London, receiving his
master's of theology from
King's College in 1966. He
then returned from his four
years abroad to teach at the
Federal Theological
Seminary at Alice in the
Eastern Cape as well as to
serve as the chaplain of the
University of Fort Hare. In
1970, Tutu moved to the
University of Roma in
Lesotho to serve as a
lecturer in the department
of theology. Two years
later, he decided to move
back to England to accept
his appointment as the
associate director of the
Theological Education Fund
of the World Council of
Churches in Kent.
Tutu's rise to international
prominence began when he
became the first black
person to be appointed the
Anglican Dean of
Johannesburg in 1975. It
was in this position that he
emerged as one of the most
prominent and eloquent
voices in the South African
anti-apartheid movement.
Tutu explained, "I realized
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.'"
In 1976, shortly after he
was appointed Bishop of
Lesotho, further raising his
international profile, Tutu
wrote a letter to the South
African Prime Minister
warning him that a failure
to quickly redress racial
inequality could have dire
consequences, but his
letter was ignored. Tutu
was selected as the
General Secretary of the
South African Council of
Churches in 1978, and he
continued to use his
elevated position in the
South African religious
hierarchy to advocate for
an end to apartheid. "I
never doubted that
ultimately we were going to
be free, because ultimately
I knew there was no way in
which a lie could prevail
over the truth, darkness
over light, death over life,"
he said.
In 1984, Desmond Tutu
received the Nobel Peace
Prize "not only as a gesture
of support to him and to the
South African Council of
Churches of which he is
leader, but also to all
individuals and groups in
South Africa who, with their
concern for human dignity,
fraternity and democracy,
incite the admiration of the
world." He was the first
South African to receive the
award since Albert Luthuli
in 1961. Tutu's receipt of
the Nobel Peace Prize
transformed South Africa's
anti-apartheid movement
into a truly international
force with deep sympathies
all across the globe. "It
opened doors which was
important for our people,"
he said about the award. "It
was important for our
people at that point in our
history because we were
tending to go off the radar
screen and this brought us
back spectacularly." The
award also elevated Tutu to
the status of a renowned
world leader. As he himself
put it, "You get the Nobel
Peace Prize and you say
the same thing that you
said before you got the
prize and now everybody
thinks, 'Oh, dear, the oracle
has spoken.'"
In 1985, Tutu was
appointed the Bishop of
Johannesburg, and a year
later he became the first
black person to hold the
highest position in the
South African Anglican
Church when he was
chosen as the Archbishop
of Cape Town. In 1987, he
was also named the
president of the All Africa
Conference of Churches, a
position he held until 1997.
In no small part due to
Tutu's eloquent advocacy
and brave leadership, in
1993 South African
apartheid finally came to
an end, and in 1994 South
Africans elected Nelson
Mandela as their first black
president. The honor of
introducing the new
president to the nation fell
to Tutu. He recalled that in
that triumphant moment he
whispered to God, "If I die
now, it would be almost the
perfect moment. This is the
theme for which we had all
been waiting for."
President Mandela
appointed Tutu to head a
Truth and Reconciliation
Commission tasked with
investigating and reporting
on the atrocities committed
by both sides in the
struggle over apartheid.
Personal Life
Tutu married a woman
named Leah Nomalizo on
July 2, 1955. They have
four children and remain
married today. Although he
officially retired from
public life in the late 1990s,
Tutu continues to advocate
for social justice and
equality across the globe.
In 2007, he joined The
Elders, a group of seasoned
world leaders including
Nelson Mandela, Kofi
Annan, Jimmy Carter and
others, who meet to
discuss ways to promote
human rights and world
peace.
Desmond Tutu stands
among the world's
foremost human rights
activists. Like Nelson
Mandela, Mohandas Gandhi
and Martin Luther King Jr.,
his teachings reach beyond
the specific causes for
which he advocated to
speak for all oppressed
peoples' struggles for
equality and freedom.
Perhaps what makes Tutu
so inspirational and
universal a figure is his
unshakable optimism in the
face of overwhelming odds
and his limitless faith in
the ability of human beings
to do good. "Despite all of
the ghastliness in the
world, human beings are
made for goodness," he
once said. "The ones that
are held in high regard are
not militarily powerful, nor
even economically
prosperous. They have a
commitment to try and
make the world a better
place."

Source:
http://www.biography.com/people/desmond-tutu-9512516
Why the epistle? Just post the link and screenshot na

1 Like

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Frales6(f): 9:46am On Dec 26, 2021
webbro007:
Impact lives o,nor be to live long
Lol. Sure!!!
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Reference(m): 9:48am On Dec 26, 2021
An icon has gone to rest.

1 Like

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by church123: 9:54am On Dec 26, 2021
RIP,Desmond Tutu,
One of the greatest African that has ever lived.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by ShaqFu: 10:04am On Dec 26, 2021
Rest In Paradise my good sir. We will forever respect you and cherish the legacy you left behind.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by lomprico(m): 10:39am On Dec 26, 2021
RIP great man.
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by opportunities12(m): 10:43am On Dec 26, 2021
EmekaBlue:
Vatican lower your candles

A great Catholic has gone
Can you read through again?
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by fmthegreatest(m): 10:49am On Dec 26, 2021
His unforgettable remark on misuse of religion by the white to colonialism Africa :"When the white men came they ask us to close our eyes for prayers before we open our eyes they have taken all our lands." RIP Desmond Tutu
Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by Dukeolumidemans(m): 11:02am On Dec 26, 2021
I salute u Desmond Tutu. We Africans will never forget u and ur immense contribution to Freedom of the Blackrace.
Salute ur brother and friend Madiba the great and Shaka d Zulu.
1 day to 4 days to 7days, we will forever remember u all...

2 Likes

Re: Archbishop Desmond Tutu Is Dead. by 2times2(m): 11:02am On Dec 26, 2021
Strong name

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