Times of Oman

South Africa lays Archbishop Desmond Tutu to rest at Cape Town’s St. George’s Cathedral

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CAPE TOWN: South African anti-apartheid hero Archbishop Desmond Tutu was laid to rest on Saturday at a state funeral in Cape Town’s St. George’s Cathedral, where he will also be burried.

The funeral started with a hymn and a procession of clerics down the aisle burning incense and carrying candles inside the church where, for years, Tutu used the pulpit to fight against the country’s white minority regime.

South Africa has been marking a week of mourning following Tutu’s death on December 26. He was aged 90.

“When we were in the dark, he brought light,’’ Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the head of the worldwide Anglican church, said in a video message shown at the funeral mass.

“For me to praise him is like a mouse giving tribute to an elephant,’’ Welby said. “South Africa has given us extraordin­ary examples of towering leaders of the rainbow nation with President

Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Tutu .... Many Nobel winners’ lights have grown dimmer over time, but Archbishop Tutu’s has grown brighter.’’

Tutu died peacefully at the Oasis Frail Care Center in Cape Town, his trust said. He had been hospitaliz­ed several times since 2015 after being diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1997.

Tutu requests ‘no lavish spending’

Several thousand people on Saturday, some of whom had travelled across the country, filed past the rope-handled casket made of pine, adorned by a bunch of carnations.

Renowned for his modesty, the

archbishop requested “no lavish spending” on his funeral and he even “asked that the coffin be the cheapest available,” his foundation said.

President Cyril Ramaphosa, who will deliver the eulogy, organized a special category funeral, usually arranged for presidents and very important people.

Ramaphosa is also expected to hand South Africa’s multicolou­red flag to Tutu’s widow, Leah, as a symbol of her husband’s descriptio­n of the post-apartheid country as the “Rainbow Nation.”

Anti-apartheid hero

Tutu’s death represents a huge

loss for South Africa, where many called him “Tata,” meaning father.

Born on October 7, 1931, in Klerksdorp, west of Johannesbu­rg, Tutu became a teacher before entering St. Peter’s Theologica­l College in Rosetenvil­le in 1958. He was ordained in 1961.

In 1985, Tutu became the first Black Anglican bishop of Johannesbu­rg. A year later, he was named the first Black archbishop of Cape Town.

Throughout the 1980s, when South Africa was marred by apartheid violence, Tutu was one of the most prominent Black leaders to speak out against abuses

committed by the white regime.

He was a powerful force for nonviolenc­e in the the country’s anti-apartheid movement, earning him a Nobel Peace Prize in 1984.

Tutu also campaigned internatio­nally for human rights, particular­ly LGBTQ rights and same-sex marriage.

“I would not worship a God who is homophobic,” he said in 2013, launching a campaign for LGBTQ rights in Cape Town. “I would refuse to go to a homophobic heaven. No, I would say, ‘Sorry, I would much rather go to the other place.’”

 ?? - DW ?? FUNERAL CEREMONY: The funeral started with a hymn and a procession of clerics down the aisle burning incense and carrying candles inside the church where, for years, Tutu used the pulpit to fight against the country’s white minority regime.
- DW FUNERAL CEREMONY: The funeral started with a hymn and a procession of clerics down the aisle burning incense and carrying candles inside the church where, for years, Tutu used the pulpit to fight against the country’s white minority regime.

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