Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu appealed to South
Africans to resuscitate the values associated with its early days of
democracy as he marked 30 years since receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.
"My plea to my compatriots, to government and civil
society, faith leaders and educators, parents and elders and youth, is
to institute programmes and trigger discussions aimed at resuscitating
the national spirit of magnanimity and common purpose - and fostering
self-esteem and self-worth."
Tutu, 83, said he was honoured to have received the Nobel Peace Prize on December 10, 1984.
"The feeling of national euphoria that took hold in
those early years of our democracy masked the necessity for us to follow
through the work of healing a society battered and bruised by
centuries of racial division and oppression," he said in a statement.
Mechanisms aimed at redistributing wealth had largely failed with the gap between rich and poor having widened.
The education system was also not succeeding in lifting people out of poverty.
"All these factors contribute to retarding the healing
of the soul of the nation, and conspire to create the environment for
the intolerable levels of violence and racism that bedevil our society
today," Tutu said.
He reflected on stories that dominated South African media coverage this year.
These included the trial of paralympian Oscar Pistorius for shooting dead his girlfriend, model Reeva Steenkamp.
Tutu said: "Our women and children seem constantly under threat from predator men".
Another news story he referred to was the wrapping up of the Commission of Inquiry into the events at Marikana in 2012.
On August 16 two years ago, 34 people, mostly striking
miners, were shot dead by police in a confrontation that Tutu said
"mirrored the worst apartheid police atrocities".
"It's as if we're in a time warp, and have returned to the past.
"Thirty years ago, on acceptance of the Peace Prize, I
reflected on the rich bounty God had given South Africa; there were
enough of the good things for all to live in dignity. This remains the
case."
Tutu said one of former president Nelson Mandela's
greatest gifts had been to teach South Africans to "see beyond
pigmentation, beyond gender, sexual orientation, social status and
religious belief to acknowledge the worth of all people".
The Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation said on
Tuesday that Tutu had cancelled his travel plans for the rest of the
year because he was starting a new course of medication to manage the
prostate cancer he has been living with for 15 years.
Tutu's daughter said he would no longer attend the Nobel Peace Laureates Summit in Rome this week.
-SAPA
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*Note: Views expressed in the commentaries on this website are those of individual authors and not necessarily those of PEFM 87.6or our presenters or correspondents. Quotes are obviously the opinion of the source. A quote is just a quote and these are offered without comment. Use of a news story or commentary is not an endorsement of the source website.
Follow us on Facebook:
PEFM 87.6
Follow us on Twitter:
@PEFMnews
Listen to us on streaming internet radio at: Tunein and from our website at: PEFM
International Correspondent Scott Congdon can be reached at:
Mail: scottcpefm@gmail.com
Phone: 010 500 8203 (in South Africa) (Available 3-5pm SAST weekdays)
011 27 10 500 8203 (calling from outside of South Africa) (Available 3-5pm SAST weekdays)
*Note: Views expressed in the commentaries on this website are those of individual authors and not necessarily those of PEFM 87.6or our presenters or correspondents. Quotes are obviously the opinion of the source. A quote is just a quote and these are offered without comment. Use of a news story or commentary is not an endorsement of the source website.
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