The Fiji Times

‘A giant among us’

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CAPE TOWN - President Cyril Ramaphosa lauded the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu as “our moral compass and national conscience” as South Africa bade farewell at a state funeral on Saturday to a hero of the struggle against apartheid.

“Our departed father was a crusader in the struggle for freedom, for justice, for equality and for peace, not just in South Africa, the country of his birth, but around the world,” Mr Ramaphosa said, delivering the main eulogy at the service in St George’s Cathedral, Cape Town, where for years Archbishop Tutu preached against racial injustice.

The president then handed over the national flag to Archbishop Tutu’s widow, Nomalizo Leah, known as “Mama Leah”.

Archbishop Tutu, who was awarded the Nobel Peace prize in 1984 for his non-violent opposition to white minority rule, died last Sunday aged 90.

His widow sat in a wheelchair in the front row of the congregati­on, draped in a purple scarf, the colour of her husband’s clerical robes. Ramaphosa wore a matching necktie.

Cape Town, the city where Archbishop Tutu lived for most of his later life, was unseasonab­ly rainy early on Saturday as mourners gathered to bid farewell to the man fondly known as “The Arch”.

The sun shone brightly after the requiem Mass as six white-robed clergy acting as pall bearers wheeled the coffin out of the cathedral to a hearse. Tutu’s body will be cremated and then his ashes interred behind the cathedral’s pulpit in a private ceremony.”Small in physical stature, he was a giant among us morally and spirituall­y,” said retired Bishop Michael Nuttall, who served as Tutu’s deputy for many years.

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