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Associated Press
Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu announced recently he is retiring from public life later this year when he turns 79, saying ``the time has now come to slow down'' and spend more time with his family.
The former Anglican archbishop of
``Instead of growing old gracefully, at home with my family reading and writing and praying and thinking too much of my time has been spent at airports and in hotels,'' Tutu said in a statement Thursday. ``The time has now come to slow down, to sip Rooibos tea with my beloved wife in the afternoons, to watch cricket, to travel to visit my children and grandchildren, rather than to conferences and conventions and university campuses.''
In recent weeks, a jovial Tutu appeared at several World Cup events. He gave a speech to thunderous applause at the tournament's opening concert and was also seen dancing in his seat at the
It is Tutu who labeled
He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, then used his new international stature to step up the campaign against apartheid. Tutu led calls for punitive sanctions against
He was ever-present during the turbulent final years of apartheid and the ensuing transition to majority rule, praying and sermonizing after massacres and then heading the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. For more than two years the panel listened to people testifying about torture, killings and other atrocities during the apartheid era.
Former South African president Nelson Mandela made a similar decision to largely retire from public life back in 2004.
Tutu said once he steps down, he will no longer be available for media interviews and new appointments will not be added to his schedule.
He said, though, that he would stay involved with the Nobel Laureate Group and a group of international statesmen and women brought together by Mandela known as the Elders. Tutu also will remained involved in the
Tutu said Thursday he contributed ``in a small way to the development of our new democratic, exhilarating, exasperating nation.
Thank you to my colleagues, past and present, for doing all the work and allowing me to take the credit,'' he said.
Tutu is one of
While his role as a churchman provided some protection from the apartheid-era security police, Tutu was arrested repeatedly before
The ANC swept to power in the 1994 elections and Mandela, fondly known as Madiba, became the nation's first black president.
``As Madiba said on his retirement: Don't call me; I'll call you,'' Tutu told journalists.