Albert Lutuli Article Index for
Albert
Limousines in
Albert
Website Links For
Albert
 

Information About

Albert Lutuli




Lutuli was born in Southern Rhodesia .
He was awarded the 1960 Nobel Peace Prize for his role in the ANC and its fight against Apartheid .

Third son of Christian missionary John Bunyan Lutuli, and Mtonya Gumede, Lutuli was born in Rhodesia around 1898. His father died, and he and his mother returned to their ancestral home of Groutville in KwaDukuza (Stanger), Natal , South Africa , where he stayed with his uncle Martin Lutuli, who was at that time the elected chief of the Christian Zulus inhabiting the Umvoti mission Reserve. On completing a teaching course at Edendale, near Pietermaritzburg , Lutuli took up the running of a small primary school in the Natal uplands. He was confirmed in the Methodist church and became a lay preacher. In 1920 he received a government bursary to attend a higher teachers' training course at Adams College , and subsequently joined the training college staff, teaching alongside Z.K. Mathews , who was then head of the Adams College High School. To provide financial support for his mother, he declined a scholarship to University Of Fort Hare .

In 1928 he became secretary of the African Teacher's Association and in 1933 its president. He was also active in missionary work.

In 1933 the tribal elders asked Lutuli to become chief of the tribe. For two years he hesitated, but accepted the call in early 1936 and became chieftain, until removed from this office by the government in 1952.

In 1936 the government disenfranchised the only Africans who had had voting rights — those in Cape Province ; in 1948 the Nationalist Party , in control of the government, adopted the policy of Apartheid , or "total apartness"; in the 1950s the laws known as the Pass Laws were tightened.

In 1944 Lutuli joined the African National Congress (ANC). In 1945 he was elected to the Committee of the Natal Provincial Division of ANC and in 1951 to the presidency of the Division. The next year he joined with other ANC leaders in organizing nonviolent campaigns to defy discriminatory laws.

The government, charging Lutuli with a conflict of interest, demanded that he withdraw his membership in ANC or forfeit his office as tribal chief. Refusing to do either voluntarily, he was dismissed from his chieftainship.

A month later Lutuli was elected president-general of ANC. Responding immediately, the government imposed a succession of bans on his movement, the first for two years, the second also for two years. When this second ban expired, he attended an ANC conference in 1956 , only to be arrested and charged with treason a few months later, along with 155 others. After being held in custody for about a year during the preliminary hearings, he was released in December, 1957 , and the charges against him and 64 others were dropped.

Another five year ban confining him to a fifteen-mile radius of his home. The ban was temporarily lifted while he testified at the continuing treason trials. It was lifted again in March 1960 , to permit his arrest for publicly burning his Pass following the Sharpeville Massacre . In the ensuing state of emergency he was arrested, found guilty, fined, given a suspended jail sentence and returned to Groutville. One final time the ban was lifted, this time for ten days in early December of 1961 to permit Lutuli and his wife to attend the Nobel Peace Prize ceremonies in Oslo , an award described by ''Die Transvaler'' as "an inexplicable pathological phenomenon".

In 1962 he was elected Rector Of Glasgow University by the students, serving until 1965 .

A fourth ban to run for five years confining Lutuli to the immediate vicinity of his home was issued in May 1964 , to run concurrently with the third ban.

In July 1967 , at the age of 69, he was fatally injured in an accident near his home in Stanger .

In 2004 he was voted 41st in the SABC3's Great South Africans .


REFERENCES



EXTERNAL LINK