Word: tutu
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...Tutu plays a complex role in the South African freedom struggle. He does not have a huge political following, nothing comparable to that of Nelson Mandela, the long-imprisoned black nationalist leader, or Mangosuthu Buthelezi, chief of the 6 million-member Zulu tribe. Tutu calls himself an "interim leader," saying that he would be less important if Mandela and others were released from prison. The archbishop is most popular among the small group of educated, middle-class blacks, but he has proved to be effective in calming angry crowds in the black townships...
...diminutive figure, full of fire, Tutu is seemingly fearless when he attacks a mob for giving way to violence. In June, he managed to arrange a cease-fire between young radicals and black vigilantes in the Crossroads camp outside Cape Town. But he can have difficulties controlling some groups of youths. Says he: "Young blacks are becoming increasingly committed to using violence, despite my calls for peaceful change. If I were younger, I would have rejected Tutu a long time...
...archbishop's foreign travels have probably been his most significant service to his black countrymen. More than any other South African of his generation, Tutu has dramatized to the world the iniquities of apartheid. Some South African whites complain that he travels too much, saying his role within the country is vastly exaggerated abroad. The Sunday Times of Johannesburg reports that he has taken 22 trips outside South Africa in the past three years...
...Pretoria government has long since learned that the more it condemns Tutu, the more the world honors him. In late 1984, for example, after a particularly vigorous government campaign in which one Cabinet minister warned him against committing "wicked acts under the cloak of religion," Tutu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. The government would undoubtedly love to ban him or arrest him, but officials are concerned about the price the country would pay in world opinion...
...recent months, Tutu's speeches have become more and more fatalistic. Just before becoming archbishop, he told TIME's Johannesburg bureau chief, Bruce Nelan, "I think the white ruling class is quite ready to do a Samson on us. That is, they will pull down the pillars, even if it means they perish in the process. They are really scared that we are going to treat them as they treated...