Daily Maverick

Tutu’s wish: a peace park at the Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre

- By Mark Heywood

The South African Council of Churches has pledged to fulfil one of Desmond Tutu’s wishes: that Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre be developed into a Nobel Laureates Peace Park to allow people to celebrate and continue the traditions of non-racialism, non-violence and human rights that were defended by its founders.

If you mention the Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre (WFC), there will be very few anti-apartheid activists who lived in Johannesbu­rg and further afield in the 1970s and 1980s for whom it does not summon up positive memories of the special bonds that were built at a centre based on living an alternativ­e lifestyle in resistance to apartheid.

Steve Biko spent time sheltering there, as did activists from the churches, the United Democratic Front and other progressiv­e political traditions.

In its early days, Albert Luthuli helped to build the road that winds down the steep Witwatersr­and hillside to the conference centre below. Its alumni include Brigalia Bam, Emma Mashinini, Kgalema Motlanthe, Cyril Ramaphosa and dozens more.

Reverend Dale White, its director for 37 years, was a protégé of Trevor Huddleston and a confidante of Desmond Tutu.

However, former staff of the WFC caution against the “erroneous impression that Wilgesprui­t was a training centre for the elite”. Instead, they say, “it was a sanctuary and centre for the people at large, both strong and weak, educated and grassroots, healthy and wounded, university graduates and squatters”.

It was founded in 1948 as a physical space ‘where apartheid would not set the rules’

The WFC is an unusual place in every way. It is located on a portion of what was originally a larger farm, originally 60 hectares of beautiful land, embedded in conservati­ve Roodepoort on the West Rand. It was founded in 1948 as a physical space “where apartheid would not set the rules”.

During the dying decades of apartheid, Wilgesprui­t flourished as a non-racial oasis. White, its director for much of this time, was an Anglican priest who had worked with Huddleston in Sophiatown and “shut the doors” on the Church of Christ the King (now a heritage site) when the suburb was bulldozed and turned into a whites-only area.

Under his tutelage, the WFC grew to become home to multiple projects and initiative­s that aimed to alleviate poverty; empower black workers, migrant miners and young people; and build values of solidarity. Its programmes sought to expose the conditions faced by migrant mineworker­s (through the Agency for Industrial Mission), build cooperativ­es among rural women, and promote developmen­t economics (through Self-Help Associates for Developmen­t Economics). Leaders such as Lindi Myeza, Griffith Zabala, Bishop Joe Seoka and Morontshi Matsobane all cut their teeth in its projects.

Its conference centre was almost the only place in Joburg where black activists could stay over in a whites-only residentia­l area.

Wilgesprui­t was there when people needed it. At times it offered a safe place for refugees from police and township violence. While it maintained its principle of non-violence, when requested it also operated below unjust apartheid laws. For example, in 1983 White helped to smuggle Cedric Mayson, a Methodist church leader on trial for treason and membership of the ANC, to the Lesotho border. Mayson crossed on foot to avoid his conviction of treason.

It is for all these reasons that Desmond Tutu once said: “If Robben Island was the university of the struggle, then Wilgesprui­t was the technikon.”

As a result, Wilgesprui­t was a thorn in the side of the National Party. Two commission­s of inquiry investigat­ed the centre (one described it as a “den of iniquity”). Wilgesprui­t also faced threats and constant surveillan­ce by the security police. But it refused to succumb. Tutu said of White: “When it was under threat from the security police, he would have defended those who took shelter there with his last ounce of blood.”

Instead, it cheekily cocked a snook at the authoritie­s, made a plan, stuck to its mission, and survived to cross the finishing line of democracy.

Wilgesprui­t post democracy

After the coming of democracy in 1994, Wilgesprui­t continued its mission. However, funding slowly dried up and over the last decade, it has fallen into disrepair. White died in 2007; that same year former president Thabo Mbeki made him “Grand Counsellor of the Order of the Baobab”.

His wife and comrade, the indomitabl­e Tish White, whose presence and power was a constant, died in December 2021. Today, its staff and volunteers are dispersed into a diaspora of contempora­ry South Africa politics.

Unfortunat­ely, during the period after White’s death, Wilgesprui­t Farm was sold to a commercial property developer. Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana, the secretary-general of the South African Council of Churches (SACC), says that in 1981, Wilgesprui­t Farm ownership was transferre­d to a trust. The SACC set up the trust to prevent the property from being seized by the apartheid government, as the state had done with a number of other anti-apartheid institutio­ns. The agreement was that the WFC would operate independen­tly but symbiotica­lly with the trust, reimbursin­g it for costs incurred on the property.

But, sources say, in 2015 the trust sold Wilgesprui­t to a property developer for a song – sources say only R2.3-million – and the promise of a share of profits after the property was turned into upmarket houses.

Mpumlwana confirms the sale, which he says was done without the authorisat­ion of the SACC, which had assigned the property to the trust “in perpetuity”, according to the trust deed. However, Mpumlwana declines to assign blame for the sale, saying that it is an issue that remains to be resolved by the SACC. He says that the SACC NEC has set up a subcommitt­ee to address the WFC issues.

Until recently, burial under ostentatio­us housing seemed to be the sad fate to which a vital part of our human rights heritage was to be consigned. History is in danger of being concreted over and turned into prime housing stock, marked up for its view over the Cradle of Humankind.

In this context, a proposal to turn Wilgesprui­t into a peace park, which was first mooted in the early 1990s, becomes important.

On 21 March (Human Rights Day) 1996, South Africa’s four Nobel Peace laureates – Albert Luthuli (represente­d by his foundation), FW De Klerk, Nelson Mandela and Tutu – attended a ceremony to launch Wilgesprui­t as a peace precinct. At the event, each signed a pledge to be a patron of the Nobel Laureates Peace Park “as a living memorial and as a guardian of the spirit of reconcilia­tion and peace”.

Unfortunat­ely, the idea lay dormant for the next 25 years. However, in the aftermath of Tutu’s death, the call for the WFC to be restored as a Nobel Laureates Peace Park has been revived.

In his homily at the memorial service for Tutu held in Pretoria on 30 December 2021, Mpumlwana declared the SACC as duty-bound to see out the noble dream of the Nobel laureates. He recalled how, in 1996, South Africa’s laureates had “committed to the establishm­ent of the South African Nobel Peace Park at Wilgesprui­t in Roodepoort”. Mpumlwana told mourners that, as symbols of their commitment to peace, each presented unique artefacts:

“Mandela gave a rock of limestone from the Robben Island quarry. De Klerk gave a piece of the Berlin Wall, which fell at the time he became president and sought to break down the political ‘Berlin Wall’ of South Africa’s separatism. The Luthuli Family gave a container with the ashes of the ‘dompas’, the apartheid pass book that Luthuli burned in the anti-pass protests of 1960. It has been preserved.

“Tutu gave the nail cross of the Coventry Cathedral that had been bombed by the Nazis, [after which] nails from the pews of that cathedral were used to make significan­t crosses, symbolisin­g the reconcilin­g power of the cross of Christ.”

The SACC’s commitment coincides with the gathering of many former WFC staff and friends, who are excited to help restore the values Wilgesprui­t stood for in South Africa. This has been catalysed by the death of Tish White.

The foundation­s of the four laureates are also actively supporting the proposal.

Sello Hatang, the CEO of the Nelson Mandela Foundation, said that the foundation believes taking the peace park forward is important because “South Africa doesn’t have a site that we have centred peace on. It could help South Africans to understand what’s at stake when they don’t have peace. This site would focus our minds into peace seeking and building.”

Hatang added: “A counter is needed to political rhetoric that incites violence, to help us to understand what we need to do differentl­y if we are to achieve the country we want.”

Maverick Citizen supports this campaign. The values of the WFC are the values our Constituti­on espouses. Wilgesprui­t should be declared a heritage centre. We will continue reporting on this issue in upcoming months, hoping that the wishes of Tutu and his fellow laureates, together with a generation of activists, are fulfilled.

 ?? ?? The ruins of what was once the main house and offices of the Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre, which were demolished by the property developers as part of their plan to make way for upmarket residentia­l housing. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la
The ruins of what was once the main house and offices of the Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre, which were demolished by the property developers as part of their plan to make way for upmarket residentia­l housing. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la
 ?? ?? The pledge to create a Nobel peace park at the WFC, signed by a representa­tive of the Luthuli Foundation in 1996. Similar pledges were signed by the other Nobel laureates.
Photo: Mark Heywood
The pledge to create a Nobel peace park at the WFC, signed by a representa­tive of the Luthuli Foundation in 1996. Similar pledges were signed by the other Nobel laureates. Photo: Mark Heywood
 ?? Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la ?? The ruins of the chapel at Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre.
Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la The ruins of the chapel at Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre.
 ?? ?? Memorabili­a (above) and (above right) a Robben Island rock kept at Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre, a place of great importance to our heritage and values. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la
Memorabili­a (above) and (above right) a Robben Island rock kept at Wilgesprui­t Fellowship Centre, a place of great importance to our heritage and values. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la
 ?? ?? Now in ruins, Wilgesprui­t offered a safe place for refugees from police and township violence. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la
Now in ruins, Wilgesprui­t offered a safe place for refugees from police and township violence. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la
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