Farewell To Our Moral Compass, Archbishop Desmond Tutu – South Africa Bids

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The funeral service for an anti-apartheid campaigner Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa was conducted at the Anglican cathedral in Cape Town. Desmond Tutu, who won a Nobel Peace Prize assisted in stopping the racist regime in South Africa, died last Sunday aged 90. President Cyril Ramaphosa eulogized Tutu as “the spiritual father of our new nation and our moral compass”. Tutu had emphasized there should be no “extravagant expenditure” on his own funeral. Tutu insisted on “the cheapest available coffin ever”.

In the service, all manner of people from different parts of the earth gathered at St George’s Cathedral for Saturday’s mass, which had limited numbers because of coronavirus restrictions. Tutu’s widow Nomalizo Leah sat in a wheelchair at the front of the congregation wearing a purple shawl – the colour of her late husband’s clerical robes.

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The Archbishop was one of the brains behind the revolution to end the policy of racial discrimination imposed by the white minority rulers against the black majority in South Africa from 1948 until 1991.

Tutu insisted that he be given “the cheapest available coffin”

In the main eulogy at the official state funeral on Saturday, Mr Ramaphosa described the archbishop as a “crusader in the struggle for freedom, for justice, for equality and for peace. Not only in South Africa… but around the world as well”.

“If we are to understand a global icon to be someone of great moral stature, of exceptional qualities, and of service to humanity there can be no doubt that it refers to the man we’re laying to rest today,” he said.

Tutu Carried By Fellow Archbishops

Saturday’s funeral was given a special status, usually designated for presidents and very important people.

Tutu had requested that the only flowers in the cathedral should be a “bouquet of carnations from his family”, according to the Archbishop Tutu IP Trust and the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation. His ashes are to be interred behind the pulpit at St George’s Cathedral – the Anglican diocese he served as Archbishop for 35 years.  It was earlier revealed that Tutu is to be aquamated – a process using water that is described as an environmentally friendly alternative to cremation.

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