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Sunday, June 29, 2025

Cape Town bells to toll in honour of Archbishop Desmond Tutu

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1280 days ago
20211227

By AN­DREW MEL­DRUM | AS­SO­CI­AT­ED PRESS

 

JO­HAN­NES­BURG (AP) — Bells will ring in at mid­day Mon­day from St. George’s An­gli­can Cathe­dral in Cape Town to ho­n­our Arch­bish­op Emer­i­tus Desmond Tu­tu, a day af­ter his death at age 90.

The bells at the cathe­dral, where Tu­tu urged South Africans of all races to work to­geth­er against apartheid, will toll for 10 min­utes at noon for five days to mark Tu­tu’s life.

“We ask all who hear the bells to pause their busy sched­ules for a mo­ment in trib­ute to Arch­bish­op Tu­tu,” said the cur­rent Arch­bish­op of Cape Town, Thabo Mak­go­ba.

The ac­tivist prelate worked against South Africa’s apartheid regime that op­pressed the coun­try’s Black ma­jor­i­ty. Fol­low­ing the end of apartheid in 1994, when South Africa be­came a democ­ra­cy, Tu­tu chaired the Truth and Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion Com­mis­sion that doc­u­ment­ed atroc­i­ties and sought to pro­mote na­tion­al rec­on­cil­i­a­tion. Tu­tu al­so be­came one of the world’s most promi­nent re­li­gious lead­ers to cham­pi­on LGBTQ rights.

Sev­er­al events in South Africa are be­ing planned to ho­n­our Tu­tu’s life.

Tu­tu’s body will lie in state at the cathe­dral in Cape Town on Fri­day be­fore a re­quiem mass is held Sat­ur­day, Mak­go­ba said. In ad­di­tion, an ec­u­meni­cal ser­vice will be held for Tu­tu on Wednes­day in South Africa’s cap­i­tal, Pre­to­ria.

South Africans are lay­ing flow­ers at the cathe­dral, in front of Tu­tu’s home in Cape Town’s Mil­ner­ton area, and in front of his for­mer home in Sowe­to.

“He knew in his soul that good would tri­umph over evil, that jus­tice would pre­vail over in­iq­ui­ty, and that rec­on­cil­i­a­tion would pre­vail over re­venge and re­crim­i­na­tion. He knew that apartheid would end, that democ­ra­cy would come,” South African Pres­i­dent Cyril Ramaphosa said of Tu­tu, in a na­tion­al­ly broad­cast ad­dress Sun­day night.

“He knew that our peo­ple would be free. By the same mea­sure, he was con­vinced, even to the end of his life, that pover­ty, hunger and mis­ery can be de­feat­ed; that all peo­ple can live to­geth­er in peace, se­cu­ri­ty and com­fort,” said Ramaphosa who added that South Africa’s flags will be flown at half-staff this week.

Ramaphosa urged all South Africans to “pay re­spects to the de­part­ed and to cel­e­brate life with the ex­u­ber­ance and the pur­pose of our beloved Arch­bish­op. May we fol­low in his foot­steps. May we too be wor­thy in­her­i­tors of the man­tle of ser­vice, of self­less­ness, of courage, and of prin­ci­pled sol­i­dar­i­ty with the poor and mar­gin­al­ized.”


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