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The life and work of Desmond Tutu

Desmond Mpilo Tutu was born on 7th of October 1931 in Klerksdorf, a gold-mining town 120 miles to the west of Johannesburg. He moved with his family to Johannesburg at the age of twelve and earned money selling peanuts at bus stops and caddying at golf clubs.
Desmond Tutu wanted to become a doctor but his family did not have the means for him to realize his dream and so he followed his father's footsteps and became a teacher. Hardly had he begun his career as teacher than the South African government introduced laws aimed at providing black pupils a poorer education than their white counterparts.

Tutu wanted his pupils to become free and independent adults who could think and make decisions on their own, yet now he was expected to intentionally limit their knowledge. This he found impossible to go along with and decided to become a priest.

Bishop Tutu spoke in the name of all of South Africa's churches against the apartheid system, which discriminated against races and violated human rights. Apartheid was introduced into South Africa by the National Party in 1948 in order to ensure that the minority made up of 4.5 million whites could rule over 23 million blacks.

You will find background information on the apartheid system in South Africa as part of the Human Rights Main Subject Group under the heading of advanced subject on apartheid

Black South Africans received an inferior education, were deported to the Homelands, were not permitted free movement and could be imprisoned without a trial. They were also required to carry a special passport with them at all times in which almost all their details were listed.

Desmond Tutu received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 for his leadership in the fight to free the suppressed black majority in South Africa. In his acceptance speech he appealed for peace, love and brotherhood between all the world's peoples and not only the people of South Africa. He remains true to this belief today (to the Nobel Peace Prize speech).

In 1986 he was consecrated to archbishop, the highest post in the Anglican Church. But the greatest moment for Tutu and, indeed, many others has to be the abolition of apartheid at the beginning of 1990 and the country's first general election in 1994, which elected his close friend, Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first black president. Indeed, it was Nelson Mandela who appealed to Tutu to become chairman of Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The Commission had been set up to deal with South Africa's dark past. The thinking behind the Commission was that there could be no future without forgiveness.

The Truth Commission was tasked with collecting proof of human-rights violations during South Africa's apartheid period between 1960 and 1994 and forgiving those who came forward and admitted their involvement in the horrors. Tutu is still committed to equal rights for all peoples across the world and has been able to bring his influence to bear in many of the world's conflicts.

Other information:

A tabular resume of Tutu's life is presented on the page entitled short biography

The impact that Tutu had in the fight against apartheid is addressed in another text

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This online service on the subject of political education was developed by agora-wissen, the Stuttgart-based Gesellschaft für Wissensvermittlung über neue Medien und politische Bildung (GbR) (Partnership for the Exchange of Information Using New Media and Political Education). Please contact us with your questions or comments. Translation from German into English by twigg's Übersetzung deutsch-englisch.