Rabble-Rouser for Peace
The Authorized Biography of Desmond Tutu
By John Allen. Free Press. New York. Hard Cover. 496 pages
Reviewed by Mahadev Desai
John Allen, a respected and distinguished journalist, who has
been a trusted friend of charismatic Archbishop Desmond Tutu,
Nobel Laureate and spiritual father, whose words and experiences
resonate with people of all faiths, has written an engrossing
biography of him. The absorbing biography, with 8 pages of
vintage photographs, published to coincide with Tutu’s 75th
Birthday, by Allen who has had 30 years of first-hand contact
with him has garnered ecstatic reviews over the world. His
Holiness, The Dalai Lama, comments, “Archbishop Tutu’s objective
of seeking ‘a democratic and just society without racial
divisions’ is not only applicable in South Africa, but wherever
there are human beings.” Jimmy Carter, former President of the
United States praises the biography,” This book gives remarkable
insights into how Tutu’s spiritual worldview and discipline
molded him into the preeminent religious leader in South
Africa’s struggle against racism and a passionate advocate of
human rights internationally.” Anthony Lewis, former columnist,
The New York Times, also lauds the biography,” This is a
riveting book. John Allen has given us a profound portrait of
one of the few great human beings of our age and of the country
he did so much to save. He shows Archbishop Tutu in all his
courage, his uproarious humor, his passion. And he discloses
much that happened behind the scenes in the struggle that
finally brought a peaceful revolution to South Africa.”
Tutu was born in October 1931, in Klerksdorp, South Africa.
Despite a sickly childhood and other obstacles, he obtained his
Teacher’s Diploma and began teaching at his old school in 1954.
Tutu and Leah got married in 1955. The Afrikaner Nationalist
government of 1948 had made race the fundamental building block
of society.Coloreds were stripped of franchise. Harsh Pass Laws
uprooted colored people and banished them into reserves. Workers
were forced to live away from their families in single-sex
hostels. Many lived in ‘matchbox houses’ without ceilings,
electricity, bathrooms or hot water. Schools, housing, public
transport, even beaches were segregated. Repugnant apartheid
permeated in every sphere of life. There was political turmoil
in the country. Harold Macmillan warned the government about the
wind of change blowing through the continent. Tutu could not go
to medical school, so he decided to be a priest. He went to
St.Peter’s College and graduated in 1960. He was ordained as a
priest. While there,he showed gifts of leadership, so in 1962,
he was strongly recommended to King’s College, London, for the
degree of Bachelor of divinity. He earned his degree and went on
to obtain Masters in Theology and then returned to South Africa
in 1966. He was the first black lecturer at St.Peter’s College.
In 1970, Tutu got engaged in politics when he watched police
brutally evicting hostel students from the black Fort Hare
University, where he was a chaplain. Some time later, he was
appointed associate director of the Theological Education Fund
of the World Council of Churches in London. This necessitated
extensive traveling in Africa.The travels proved very
informative and educative for him. Tutu returned to South Africa
in 1975 and earnestly began challenging iron-fisted practice of
apartheid. He became the first black dean of Johannesburg.
Within less than a year, he became bishop of Lesotho. And two
years later, Secretary –General of the South African Council of
Churches. Here he initiated staff prayer meetings, silent
retreats, insisting on courteous behavior on part of all. For
his relentless endeavors in promoting peace and racial
reconciliation he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984.It
transformed the way he was perceived.” One day no one was
listening. The next, I was an Oracle.” To fight the racial
injustice, he pressed for international economic sanctions. In
Easter 1993, after the assassination of Chris Hani, a hugely
popular figure in the African National Council, Tutu exhorted
the immense crowd to repeat the chants over and over,’ We will
be free!’ ‘All of us!’ Black and white together!’ and concluded
with a defiant declaration,”We are unstoppable! Nobody can stop
us on our march to victory! No one, no guns, nothing! Nothing
will stop us, for we are moving to freedom! We are moving to
freedom and nobody can stop us! For God is on our side!” This
sounded the death-knell of apartheid. Allen then describes
Tutu’s judicious role as head of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, which sought forgiveness for all sides. Today, the
retired Archbishop continues to appeal to the world’s conscience
by opposing the war and seeking help to fight the AIDS/HIV
crisis sweeping Africa.
Tutu has many outstanding qualities that has made him a
spiritual icon and a living legend. He has an irrepressible
sense of humor, infectious gaiety and joy. When he was in
London, he was known for calling worshippers to “roll up, roll
up, and get your holy handshakes.”! He was unconcerned about his
own security, “If I am doing God’s work, he should jolly well
look after me.” He also has photographic memory, is fluent in
six of the Country’s languages and is a captivating orator who
draws energy from the crowds... In the judgment of Fred
Williams,” He (Tutu) becomes transfigured and it becomes
transparently real when he’s in the pulpit. There is something
of the otherworldly that shines through his eyes and in his
smile and in his voice…that just lifts you into the upper
realms.” Tutu was proud to be black. In one of his papers after
the New York Theology Conference in New York, he wrote,” …we are
fundamentally subjects, not objects, persons, not things. Each
one of us is an “I” not an “it”…we are each somebody. We matter,
we are alive and kicking and black is beautiful.” He is also
very compassionate and caring. Al Gore, the former vice president
of the US likened Tutu’s authority to Gandhi’s “truth-force.”
Secretary –General Kofi Annan of the United Nations said “He has
been a voice for the voiceless and he has really stood for human
rights and human dignity around the world…”Tutu’s vision was
built on the metaphor of a rainbow. During the Defiance Campaign
of 1989, inspired by thousands of demonstrators which included
whites, he described them as the ‘Rainbow people of the God.”
This emotive, compelling, uplifting, insightful and humanizing
biography of hardship, resilience, defiance against injustice
and apartheid, is a must-read for all who believe in freedom and
justice. The biography reminds of the power of one man to change
history. John Allen, through his personal experiences, complete
access to the Tutu family, and painstaking research has written
this outstanding biography of God’s warrior wielding a Holy
Bible instead of a sword!
John Allen is a South African journalist who served as director
of communications for that country’s groundbreaking Truth and
Reconciliation Commission, and for Trinity Church, Wall Street,
in New York. He is a former president of the South African
Society of Journalists and has received awards in South Africa
for defense of press freedom and in the United States for
excellence in religious journalism.
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