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IPRA Tutu Statement
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EDITORS’ NOTE: This article was  also published at wagingnonviolence.com as “The best tribute to Desmond Tutu would be freedom for all,” and on the Peace & Change blog as “Remembering Archbishop Desmond Tutu.”

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26 December 2021

  Dear friends and family:

Last week I urged everyone to find joy in this festive season, rooted in our collective work for  justice as we prepare to close one year out with hopes for a better one in the future. Today, my joy is  diminished as we bid farewell to a true voice for justice for all, one whose circumstance and character  catapulted him to extraordinary prominence. I was truly humbled to call South African Nobel Peace  Laureate Archbishop Desmond Mpilo Tutu a friend, honoured to have his strong and supportive  words serve as Introductions to three of my books and his inimitable presence on video and in person  add to countless conferences and events I helped organize. The “Arch” truly provided a human  entranceway for so many freedom fighters who would find no similar source of sustenance from  anyone near to his level of global prominence. It was not just that he had an unquenchable thirst for  the liberation of all, leading him to a genuine, independent radicalism which defied easy ideological  definition and defied the powerbrokers of every continent and corporation. It was not just that he  fashioned—even in the busiest and most repressive of times—an administrative centre which enabled  clear access to so many grassroots resistance initiatives. Archbishop Tutu’s head and heart, his  prayers and actions, triumphantly focused on reconciliation and reparations borne of that resistance. 

In the days to come, the leaders of almost every nation, the politicians, and pundits of the most  powerful on earth, will line up to claim him as their own. But the still-colonized people of the world  who the Arch strenuously supported and defended will hopefully also remember his love—be they the  Puerto Rican nation seeking freedom from direct US colonialism or the Tibetan people seeking  freedom from China, be they the people of Western Sahara or West Papua or of Palestine, who as  subjects of modern settler-colonial Israeli apartheid were of particular concern to this servant of God.  We would also hope but do not expect that their colonizers, who will be among the first to claim Tutu  as a source of inspiration (out of both sides of their mouths), would follow the freedom-loving  directions which the Archbishop set forth. Those still imprisoned for political reasons (and their  jailers) should also remember his consistent calls for their release—be they well known figures such  as American Indian Movement elder Leonard Peltier or Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamal, or the  lesser-known names of the wrongfully incarcerated of every nation (including, in the US, Sundiata  Acoli, who is just a few years younger than the Arch). Freedom for all would be a far more fitting  tribute to the life of Archbishop Tutu than the hollow words we will undoubtedly hear repeated in the  coming days, and “peace on Earth, goodwill towards All” would be a more significant refrain if put  into practice by the arms manufacturers and weapons peddlers of the planet. 

The Arch was a great strategic thinker, and I remember sitting with him privately some years back in  his office in Cape Town. Our conversation spanned so many topics across a world of injustices, but I  recall two points of both tactical and spiritual significance. In discussing the still-incarcerated Puerto  Rican patriot Oscar Lopez Rivers, termed by many South American heads of state “the Mandela of  

the Americas,” the Arch weighed in on how best to balance his ongoing support for Oscar’s  immediate and unconditional release with the need to also understand the mind of the man who would  be destined to release him: Barack Obama. Students of realpolitik, we realized that Obama wouldn’t  simply set Oscar free based on moral suasion. The right words and right timing had to be considered  regarding the Call for release. Then, as we moved to another “agenda item,” we reflected upon the  people of Palestine’s West Bank and especially Gaza who had just suffered a bombing raid by the all powerful and unregulated Israeli Défense Force. “God must be weeping now,” the Arch sombrely repeated to me, heart sick about both the immediate human toll as well as the difficulties ahead. 

On this day, I will try not to weep for our loss of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who—as I just wrote to his daughters—lived such a truly extraordinary and meaningful life. As we send the family our  condolences and best wishes for a healing time ahead, let us do as the Arch would do, with  steadfastness and humour and a focus on what needs to be done rather than its costs. Let us work to  heal the earth, and to heal one another by redoubling our fight to Free the Land and its Peoples, to  Free All Political Prisoners, to build a beloved community of liberation where all can find the  enduring peace which is the fruit of our struggles for structural justice. 

Sincerely, 

Matt Meyer 

Secretary General, International Peace Research Association 

Senior Research Scholar, University of Massachusetts/Amherst Resistance Studies Initiative International Fellowship of Reconciliation Finance Advisory Committee Chair War Resisters’ International Africa Support Network Coordinator 

Spirit of Mandela coalition coordinating committee member 

AJ Muste Institute board member 

Movements of Movements core group member

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Contact: IPRA United Nations Office, 309 Park Place, Brooklyn NY 11238 USA OR University of Massachusetts/Amherst  Resistance Studies Initiative, 636 Tobin Hall, 135 Hicks Way, Amherst MA 01003-9277 USA; Tel: ++01/413-545-0394

E-mail: mmmsrnb1@gmail.com OR internationalpeaceresearch.sg@gmail.com Website : www.iprapeace.org