Geoffrey Alderman

By

Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Don't wear Tutu with blinkers

This famously crusading Bishop seems to have a blind spot about his 'Jewish brothers and sisters'

November 1, 2010 12:48
3 min read

Earlier this month, on the occasion of his 79th birthday, Desmond Tutu, Anglican cleric and Nobel prize-winner, announced his retirement from public life. From all over the world, fitting encomia were showered down upon this turbulent priest, who made a name for himself in the 1980s as a fierce critic of the apartheid regime in which he had grown up, and later made another name for himself as the prime mover in the so-called truth-and-reconciliation movement that, some claim, has played a pivotal role in the transformation of South Africa into a peaceful, multicultural society.

As if to mark his retirement from public life, in the days preceding the announcement, Tutu saw fit to add his voice to the call then being made by some 200 South African academics and intellectuals, demanding that the University of Johannesburg terminate a partnership agreement with Israel's Ben-Gurion University (the same BGU, incidentally, from which Nelson Mandela was apparently quite happy to accept an honorary doctorate in 1997).

In a statement published in the South African Sunday Times of September 26, Tutu explained:

"I never tire of speaking about the very deep distress in my visits to the Holy Land; they remind me so much of what happened to us black people in South Africa. Have our Jewish sisters and brothers forgotten their own previous humiliation? … While Palestinians are not able to access universities and schools, Israeli universities produce the research, technology, arguments and leaders for maintaining the occupation."

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