Chief of his
tribe and president-general of the African National Congress, Albert John Lutuli1
(1898?-July 21, 1967) was the leader of ten million black Africans in their nonviolent
campaign for civil rights in South Africa. A man of noble bearing, charitable,
intolerant of hatred, and adamant in his demands for equality and peace among
all men, Lutuli forged a philosophical compatibility between two cultures - the
Zulu culture of his native Africa and the Christian-democratic culture of Europe.
Lutuli was heir to a tradition of tribal leadership. His grandfather was
chief of his small tribe at Groutville in the Umvoti Mission Reserve near Stanger,
Natal, and was succeeded by a son. Lutuli's father was a younger son, John Bunyan
Lutuli, who became a Christian missionary and spent most of the last years of
his life in the missions among the Matabele of Rhodesia. Lutuli's mother, Mtonya
Gumede, spent part of her childhood in the household of King Cetewayo but was
raised in Groutville. She joined her husband in Rhodesia where her third son,
Albert John, was born in what Lutuli calculates would probably have been 1898.
Exactly when her husband died is not known, but by 1906 she and Albert John were
back in Groutville.
Supported by a mother who was determined that
he get an education, Albert John Lutuli went to the local Congregationalist mission
school for his primary work. He then studied at a boarding school called Ohlange
Institute for two terms before transferring to a Methodist institution at Edendale,
where he completed a teachers' course about 1917. After leaving a job as principal
of an intermediate school, which he held for two years (he was also the entire
staff, he says in his autobiography)2 - he completed the Higher Teachers'
Training Course at Adams College, attending on a scholarship. To provide financial
support for his mother, he declined a scholarship to University College at Fort
Hare and accepted an appointment at Adams, as one of two Africans to join the
staff.
A professional educator for the next fifteen years, Lutuli
then and afterwards contended that education should be made available to all Africans,
that it should be liberal and not narrowly vocational in nature, and that its
quality should be equal to that made available to white children. In 1928 he became
secretary of the African Teacher's Association and in 1933 its president.
Lutuli was also active in Christian church work, being a lay preacher for
many years. As an adviser to the organized church, he became chairman of the South
African Board of the Congregationalist Church of America, president of the Natal
Mission Conference, and an executive member of the Christian Council of South
Africa. He was a delegate to the International Missionary Conference in Madras
in 1938 and in 1948 spent nine months on a lecture tour of the United States,
sponsored by two missionary organizations.
In 1927 Lutuli married
a fellow teacher, Nokukhanya Bhengu. They established their permanent home in
Groutville, where in 1929 the first of their seven children was born. In 1933
the tribal elders asked Lutuli to become chief of the tribe. For two years he
hesitated, for he was loath to give up his profession and the financial security
it afforded. He accepted the call in early 1936 and, until removed from this office
by the government in 1952, devoted himself for the next seventeen years to the
5,000 people who made up his tribe. He performed the judicial function of a magistrate,
the mediating function of an official acting as representative of his people and
at the same time as representative of the central government, the tribal function
of a presiding dignitary at traditional festivities, and the executive function
of a leader seeking a better life for his people.
As the restrictions
imposed by the Union government on nonwhites became increasingly complete, Lutuli's
concern for his race transcended the tribal level to encompass the welfare of
all black South Africans, and indeed of all South Africans. 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,
circumscribing the freedom of movement of Africans, were tightened; and throughout
this period laws were added which put limitations on the African in almost every
aspect of his life.3
In 1944 Lutuli joined the African
National Congress (ANC), an organization somewhat analogous to the American NAACP4,
whose objective was to secure universal enfranchisement and the legal observance
of human rights. 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, for chiefs
hold office at the pleasure of the government even though elected by tribal elders.
A month later Lutuli was elected president-general of ANC. Responding immediately,
the government sought to minimize his effectiveness as a leader by banning him
from the larger South African centers and from all public meetings for two years.
Upon the expiration of that ban, he went to Johannesburg to address a meeting
but at the airport was served with a second ban confining him to a twenty-mile
radius of his home for another 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 sixty-four others were dropped.
Lutuli's return to
active leadership in 1958 was cut short by the imposition of a third ban, this
time a five-year ban prohibiting him from publishing anything and confining him
to a fifteen-mile radius of his home. The ban was temporarily lifted while he
testified at the continuing treason trials (which ended with a verdict in1961
absolving ANC of Communist subservience and of plotting the violent overthrow
of the government). It was lifted again in March, 1960, to permit his arrest for
publicly burning his pass - a gesture of solidarity with those demonstrators against
the Pass Laws who had died in the "Sharpeville massacre". The Pan-Africanist Congress,
not the African National Congress, had called the demonstration, but in the ensuing
state of emergency that was officially declared, Parliament outlawed both organizations
and apprehended their leaders. Lutuli was found guilty, fined, given a jail sentence
that was suspended because of the precarious state of his health, and returned
to the isolation of 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.
A fourth ban to run for five
years confining Lutuli to the immediate vicinity of his home was issued in May,
1964, the day before the expiration of the third ban. Still, Lutuli remained undiminished
in the public mind.
The South African Colored People's Congress nominated
him for president, the National Union of South African Students made him its honorary
president, the students of Glasgow University voted him their rector, the New
York City Protestant Council conferred an award on him. Despite the publication
ban, his autobiography circulated in the outside world, and his name appeared
on human rights petitions presented to the UN.
For fifteen years
or so before his death, Lutuli suffered from high blood pressure and once had
a slight stroke. With age, his hearing and eyesight also became impaired - perhaps
a factor in his death. For in July, 1967, at the age of sixty-nine, he was fatally
injured when he was struck by a freight train as he walked on the trestle bridge
over the Umvoti River near his home.
Selected
Bibliography
Benson, Mary, The African Patriots: The Story
of the African National Congress in South Africa. New York, Encyclopaedia
Britannica Press, 1964.
Benson, Mary, Chief Albert Lutuli of South
Africa. London, Oxford University Press, 1963 .
Callan, Edward,
Albert John Luthuli and the South African Race Conflict. Rev. ed. Kalamazoo,
Michigan, Institute of International and Area Studies, Western Michigan University,
1965.
Current Biography, 1962.
"Foe of Apartheid",
the New York Times (October 24, 1961) 22.
Gordimer, Nadine,
"Chief Luthuli", Atlantic Monthly, 203 (April, 1959) 34-39.
Italiaander, Rolf, Die Friedensmacher: Drei Neger erhielten den Friedens-Nobelpreis.
Kassel, W.Germany, Oncken, 1965.
Legum, Colin and Margaret, "Albert
Lutuli: Zulu Chief, Nobel Peace Prize Winner in The Bitter Choice: Eight South
Africans' Resistance to Tyranny" pp. 47-72. New York, World, 1968.
Lutuli, Albert John, "Freedom is the Apex". Cape Town, South African Congress
of Democrats, [1960?].
Lutuli, Albert John, Let My People Go:
An Autobiography. Prepared for publication by Charles and Sheila Hooper. Johannesburg
and London, Collins, 1962. Lutuli's life story to 1959; in later printings, sixteen
pages, written no earlier than 1964, have been added.
Lutuli, Albert
John, "The Road to Freedom Is via the Cross". Appendix A of Let My People Go,
q.v. Public statement made after dismissal from his chieftainship by the government
in 1952.
Lutuli, Albert John, "What I Would Do If I Were Prime Minister".
Ebony, 17 (February, 1962) 21-29.
Lutuli, Albert John, and
others, Africa's Freedom. London, Allen & Unwin, 1964.
Obituary, the New York Times (July 22, 1967) I, 25.
Obituary,
the (London) Times (July 22, 1967) 12.
Reeves, Ambrose, Shooting
at Sharpeville, with a Foreword by Chief Luthuli. London, Gollancz, 1960.
Sampson, Anthony, "The Chief" in The Treason Cage: The Opposition
on Trial in South Africa, pp. 1851 - 1971. London, Heinemann, 1958.
1. Lutuli preferred the spelling of his name used here, although
the commonly employed spelling, "Luthuli" appears to be a closer phonetic rendering;
he also preferred his Zulu name "Mvumbi" (continuous Rain) to that of Albert John.
see Sensor, Chief Albert Lutuli of South Africa, p. 3.
2.
Let My People Go, p. 31.
3. For a brief account of Lutuli's
struggle against apartheid see Callan, Albert John Luthuli and the South African
Race Conflict.
4. Noted by C. and M. Legum, The Bitter Choice,
p. 50.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951-1970, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.