Tutu, 79, retires from high-profile publ
Get Flash Player
Archbishop Desmond Tutu has retired from public life to spend more time with his family and on personal pursuits. However, the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate will continue some leadership roles.
Archbishop Tutu marked his 79th birthday and his retreat from public life with a party for family and friends on a cruise ship in Cape Town harbor.
The "Arch" as he is fondly known in South Africa, said in July he was spending too much time on planes and in airports on the lecture and conference circuit. Rather he said, he wants to have tea in the afternoons with his wife, write, pray, and watch lots of sport on TV.
Tutu used the pulpit and his clerical standing to boldly challenge the apartheid government for the injustices of the race based system. His actions brought him global recognition and the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984. He became the darling of the international media, but the target of government invective and anger. In an earlier interview Tutu told VOA that he may have been the one to stand out, but many others were at his side.
"I had very many supporting me and if I was standing it was because of all the many who were carrying me on their shoulders," he said. "And that is not being conventionally modest, it is the truth."
He added that the issues confronting church leaders during apartheid were clear-cut and straightforward.
"In a way I was fortunate to be part of the leadership of the church at a time when it was fairly straightforward, you were against apartheid, there was that system," he said. "And all you had to do was to fight against that system, and it is one of the easiest things actually to be against."
When democracy came to South Africa in 1994, Tutu joyfully described the people of this country as the "rainbow nation of God", a term that has come into common use.
In 1996 Tutu became chairman of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission set up to deal with gross human rights violations during the apartheid era. The commission gave victims an opportunity to have their grievances investigated by the commission and to share their stories. It also was mandated to grant amnesty to perpetrators who applied and fully disclosed their crimes.
Earlier this year it was revealed that Tutu had participated in a genome study and had his complete DNA sequenced. The study revealed that not only is Tutu a modern African, he also carries the DNA of South Africa's earliest residents, the Khoekhoe people.
Tutu earlier told VOA he was particularly delighted at the news, because the apartheid government had refused to officially acknowledge him as a South African national.
"And then just the wonderful privilege of discovering, you know I used to say when the apartheid government gave me a travel document that described my nationality as undeterminable at present, I said I mean you are crazy you guys.... my father, my mother, their parents before them were born in this country, how can I be undeterminable," he said.
Tutu will continue his work with the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation, and with The Elders, a global council of respected individuals founded by fellow Nobel Laureate Nelson Mandela.
invective: rude language and unpleasant remarks that somebody shouts when they are very angry(辱骂;咒骂)
perpetrator: a person who commits a crime or does something that is wrong or evil(作恶者;行凶者;犯罪者)
(来源:VOA 编辑:陈丹妮)
最近更新人物资讯
- 青年节专题时文精选,1个专题+5篇模板+12篇范文+1个作文合集(角度+金句+精
- 最新质量管理体系基本要求(五篇)
- 赤坂丽颜值巅峰之作,禁忌之爱代表作品-高校教师成熟
- [王仲黎]人茶共生:布朗族茶文化话语中的生态伦理
- 北京文艺日历 06.12~06.18
- 有什么好看的少女漫画推荐?
- 为了孩子陪睡校长,请别拿这电影洗白
- 当贝市场tv版apk下载
- 茉
- BBC评出有史以来美国最伟大的100部电影
- 泰山岱庙古建筑之文化特色初探
- 阴阳五行学说范文
- 2022伦敦大学学院Bartlett建筑学院Part2毕业展
- 观看平凡英雄观后感1000字
- 纽约大都会博物馆(二)古希腊艺术与神话
- 收藏 | 带你穿越500年,看一看这50位著名艺术家
- ab血型女人的性格
- 春节活动策划方案
- 为什么孕妇生产有危险时,部分丈夫和婆婆会选择保小孩?
- 《员工自发管理的儒家修为智慧》
- 菲律宾尺度片的全明星阵容,菲律宾女人质量这么高的吗?
- 文学课 | 韩少功:文学与记忆
- 《人性的污秽》中的伦理道德世界
- 宋惠莲背夫和西门庆幽会后自缢,看透情色表象下的死亡真相
- 秋波多少画(五代词全集)