Desmond Tutu: UK tributes paid to archbishop
Archbishop Desmond Tutu changed the world, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said following the death of the Nobel Peace prize laureate who helped end apartheid in South Africa.
The Most Rev Justin Welby was among a succession of UK figures paying tribute to Tutu, who died in Cape Town aged 90.
"The world is different because of this man," he said.
Boris Johnson praised his leadership and humour. Archbishop Tutu studied and worked in the UK and often visited.
The prime minister added: "He was a critical figure in the fight against apartheid and in the struggle to create a new South Africa – and will be remembered for his spiritual leadership and irrepressible good humour."
Labour Party leader Keir Starmer described Archbishop Tutu as "a tower of a man and a leader of moral activism" who "dedicated his life to tackling injustice and standing up for the oppressed".
He said: "His impact on the world crosses borders and echoes through generations."
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "His was a life that made the world a better place."
Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab described Archbishop Tutu as a "truly great figure".
He said he had met him in The Hague, when the archbishop was working for victims of war crimes, and added: "His adage, 'don't raise your voice, improve your argument', has never felt more apt."
Former cabinet minister Lord Hain, who grew up in South Africa and was a leading anti-apartheid campaigner, said Tutu was "somebody on Nelson Mandela's level who inspired millions with his honesty, his vision, his courage and his sincerity".
At the height of the anti-apartheid struggle, Tutu "roused the faithful, inspired people and also had a way of engaging that was soft and yet hard", Lord Hain said, adding that he "spoke truth to power".
Tutu first lived in the UK in the 1960s, where he studied King's College London and received degrees in theology.
He was in the country for five years and then returned in 1972, as vice-director of the Theological Education Fund of the World Council of Churches. Tutu eventually went back to South Africa to become the first African to be appointed Anglican Dean of Johannesburg.
Tutu visited Birmingham in 1989 as part of the city-wide Christian Celebrations and he and his wife saw a number of establishments, including the Nelson Mandela School in Sparkbrook.
When he was there, he criticised what he termed "two-nation" Britain, and said there were too many black people in the country's prisons.
Tutu was given the freedom of Hull in 1999 after giving the annual Wilberforce lecture there, commemorating the life and achievements of anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforce. And he returned to the UK yet again in 2004 as visiting professor in Post-Conflict Societies at King's College London.
'World feels smaller'
Archbishop Welby said Tutu – "always known as Arch" – was "a prophet and priest, a man of words and action, one who embodied the hope and joy that were the foundations of his life".
He added: "He was a man of extraordinary personal courage and bravery: when the police burst into Capetown Cathedral, he defied them by dancing down the aisle."
Tutu's love "transformed the lives of politicians and priests, township dwellers and world leaders", he added, saying he was a pioneer and "a man of enormous vision".
Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell said "the world itself feels a little smaller without him".
He said Tutu had been asked to chair the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Cape Town as "one of the few people in South Africa other than Nelson Mandela himself, who could unite the nation and carry the trust of everyone.
"In this respect, he was a giant," he added.
The archbishop added that when he got to chapel this morning to celebrate Eucharist, he might "dance a little jig in thankful memory of this wonderful human being".
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