Published by the Queens Federation of Churches
Tutu Calls Obama Election ‘A Miracle'

November 25, 2008
By Val Hymes

BALTIMORE, Maryland – Archbishop Desmond Tutu on November 22 said the election of Barack Obama as President of the United States – "a president of color" – gave hope to the world.

Tutu, who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work against South Africa's system of racial segregation called apartheid, said the choice of the first African-American president was "a miracle." Racism, he added, "was running rampant in so many places. A black man was dragged behind a truck. And you elect a man of color! You are bearers of hope, not just here, not just for people of color, but for hundreds of thousands around the world. People are dancing in the streets."

Tutu also applauded the Diocese of Maryland for electing in March its first African American bishop, Eugene T. Sutton. "What the Diocese of Maryland did yesterday, the United States of America did today," Tutu said.

Tutu spoke at an event called "Healing and Hope for Our Times," part of a fundraiser held at Old St. Paul's Church for the Tutu Institute for Prayer and Pilgrimage in Alexandria, Va., and the Maryland Bishop's Initiative on Reconciliation.

The Tutu Institute is headed by the Rev. Mpho A. Tutu, the archbishop's daughter. Bishop Sutton's initiative will focus on education for poor city children, environmental justice and racial reconciliation.

In his remarks, Tutu touched on the "economic meltdown," asking, "Where does the money go?" He also alluded to global warming, saying "Our sin leads to ecological disaster," and said with "a small part of the defense budget, children everywhere would have enough to eat, fresh water to drink, a decent home and be able to live happy together.

"Our life now is all division. Everything is slipping away. All are crying for reconciliation and atonement. But God will never forget us. None of us is an afterthought. God has a dream, one of reconciliation of all as beloved children of God."

The archbishop added, "You are precious to God. If only you would believe it. God says you are the best thing I ever created with a love that can never change. I know you by name. I love you." He urged his listeners to see that all people are "our brothers and sisters," and challenged them to "go and tell others."

Sutton announced the creation of the diocese's own Truth and Reconciliation Commission, "telling the truth about where we have been." He also intends to work for environmental justice, to help "heal the planet of the sickness caused by human action," and to work for better education for "those friends of Jesus, the children, particularly in the city where the vast majority of poor and African American children do not graduate from high school."

Young drummers and dancers from the city accompanied the arrival and departure of the bishops.

Episcopal News Service
Val Hymes is a member of St. James' Church, Lothian, in the Diocese of Maryland.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu speaks at "Healing and Hope for Our Times," part of a fundraiser held at Old St. Paul's Church in Baltimore, Maryland, on November 22 for the Tutu Institute for Prayer and Pilgrimage in Alexandria, Va., and the Maryland Bishop's Initiative on Reconciliation. Photo/Kate Lloyd © 2008 Episcopal Life Online

 

 

Queens Federation of Churches
http://www.QueensChurches.org/
Last Updated November 29, 2008