Albert Lutuli Albert John Lutuli (také známý jeho Zulu jméno Mvumbi , jeho príjmeníje nekdy a pravdepodobne více foneticky hláskoval Luthuli ) (1898? http://wikipedia.infostar.cz/a/al/albert_lutuli.html
Albert Lutuli - Biography lutuli, albert john, Freedom is the Apex . Cape Town, South African Congress ofDemocrats, 1960?. lutuli, albert john, Let My People Go An Autobiography. http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1960/lutuli-bio.html
Extractions: Chief of his tribe and president-general of the African National Congress, Albert John Lutuli (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)
Peace 1960 LAUREATES, ARTICLES, EDUCATIONAL, The Nobel Peace Prize 1960. albert john lutuli.South Africa. President of the African National Congress, in South Africa. http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1960/
Albert John Lutuli albert john lutuli. Amnesty International. Aung San Suu Kyi Yasser Arafat. albert john lutuli South Africa. Year 1960 Nobel Peace Prize http://www.thepeacemission.com/lutuli.htm
Extractions: Chief Lutuli was born in 1898, away from Groutville but returned as a child to his ancestral home. His father died when he was an infant, and in about 1908 his mother sent him back to the family's traditional home at Groutville mission station in Natal. Lutuli then lived for a period in the household of his uncle, Martin Lutuli, who was at that time the elected Chief of the Christian Zulus inhabiting Umvoti Mission Reserve around Groutville. On completing a teaching course at Edendale near Pietermaritzburg, Lutuli took up the running of a small primary school in the Natal uplands. Becoming seriously conscious of his religion for the first time, he was confirmed in the Methodist Church and became a lay preacher. The language of the Bible and Christian principles profoundly affected his political style and beliefs for the rest of his life. 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 the head of the Adams College High School. In answer to repeated calls and requests from the elders of his tribe to come home and lead them, he left teaching that year to become chief of the tribe. He was not a hereditary chief as his tribe had a democratic system of electing its chiefs.
"THE CHIEF" - ALBERT JOHN MVUMBI LUTULI 1898 - 21 JULY 1967, By Dr. Donal Brody July 1999. Number 7. " THE CHIEF" albert john MVUMBI lutuli. 1898 21 JULY 1967. By Dr. Donal Brody. The halls of political power in the new South Africa rang out on 16 June, 1999, with the names of http://www.greatepicbooks.com/epics/july99.html
Extractions: By Dr. Donal Brody The halls of political power in the new South Africa rang out on 16 June, 1999, with the names of the great Mandela and the now great Mbeki. Every once in a while, a name from the past tiptoed toward center stage but, with a few token words, were quickly whisked off; Tambo, Sisulu, Slovo, Biko and others. This was a period of much ferment in South Africa as British politicians, exhilarated by victory over the Boers, were working towards the unification of the two former British colonies, the Cape and Natal with the former Boer Republics of the Transvaal and Orange Free State. It was a period of increasing hostility of the white population of Natal towards the indigenous Zulu, leading to the 1906 Bambata Rebellion which the British suppressed by force of arms. To counter the rising anti-Zulu antagonism, Chief Martin Lutuli began the organization of the South African Native National Congress, which was formally recognized in 1912 as an emerging African political force. Albert, in the meantime, was undergoing a very traditional childhood. He was involved in the strict regimen of a young Zulu; schooling in the culture and traditions of his great people along with the varied menial duties of a young boy in tribal society. His mother Mtonya, a faithful Christian, was determined that her children would, in addition to Zulu teachings, be guided in their lives by the gospel of Jesus Christ. Albert responded to education from every source with great zeal. He read broadly, as interested in the humanities as he was in history, politics, agriculture and the classics.
Extractions: By Dr. Donal Brody Chief Lutuli was stunned by the news brought to him by Mr. Mahomed. He was aware of his nomination for the 1960 Nobel Peace Prize made in early February, 1961, by the Social Democratic Members of the Swedish Parliament, but overwhelmed nevertheless. While he was very grateful for the nomination, this humble man could not, in his wildest imagination, conceive of winning the award. In tears, Lutuli and his wife thanked God for answering the call of the oppressed people of Africa, for that is how they viewed the award of the Nobel Peace Prize. The news swept southern Africa. Accolades poured in from all corners of the world. Alan Paton honored Lutuli with the beautiful PRAISE SONG FOR LUTULI, the full text of which is at the conclusion of this article. The Zulu poet, Yesaya Yengwa, paid homage in a traditional manner. Nkosi yase Groutville! Nkosi yase Afrika! (Chief of Groutville! Chief of Africa! Chief of the world!)
Luthuli, Albert John Luthuli, albert john, Luthuli, 1961. PHOTOWORLDFPG. in full albert john MVUMBI LUTHULI, Luthuli also spelled lutuli (b. 1898, Rhodesiad. July 21, 1967, Stanger, S.Af.) http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/361_46.html
Extractions: Luthuli, 1961 PHOTOWORLDFPG in full ALBERT JOHN MVUMBI LUTHULI, Luthuli also spelled LUTULI (b. 1898, Rhodesiad. July 21, 1967, Stanger, S.Af.), Zulu chief, teacher and religious leader, and president of the African National Congress (1952-60) in South Africa. He was the first African to be awarded a Nobel Prize for Peace (1960), in recognition of his nonviolent struggle against racial discrimination. Albert John Mvumbi (Zulu: "Continuous Rain") Luthuli was born in Rhodesia, where his father, John Bunyan Luthuli, a missionary interpreter, had gone from Zululand. After his father's death, the 10-year-old Albert returned to South Africa and learned Zulu traditions and duties in the household of his uncle, the chief of Groutville, a community associated with an American Congregational mission in Natal's sugar lands. Educated through his mother's earnings as a washerwoman and by a scholarship, he graduated from the American Board Mission's teacher-training college at Adams, near Durban, and became one of its first three African instructors. In 1927 Luthuli married Nokukhanya Bhengu, a teacher and granddaughter of a clan chief. In 1936 Luthuli left teaching to become the elected chief of the community of 5,000 at Groutville. Though confronted by land hunger, poverty, and political voicelessness, he did not yet recognize the need for political action. In those early years he was, variously, secretary of the Natal African Teachers' Association and of the South African Football Association, founder of the Zulu Language and Cultural Society, and member of the Christian Council Executive, of the Joint Council of Europeans and Africans, and of the Institute of Race Relations in Durban.
Albert John Lutuli Winner Of The 1960 Nobel Prize In Peace albert john lutuli, a Nobel Peace Laureate, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive. albert john lutuli. 1960 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Books about albert john lutuliFeatured Internet Links http://www.almaz.com/nobel/peace/1960a.html
Albert John Lutuli Winner Of The 1960 Nobel Prize In Peace albert john lutuli, a Nobel Peace Laureate, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive.albert john lutuli. Books about albert john lutuli Featured Internet Links http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/1960a.html
Index Of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates Lange, Christian Lous, 1921. League Of Red Cross Societies, 1963. lutuli,albert john, 1960. Mandela, Nelson, 1993. Marshall, George Catlett, 1953. http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/alpha.html
The Lutuli Page Speech by Nelson Mandela at KwaDukuza, 25 April 1998, at which the town of Stangerwas renamed KwaDukuza albert john lutuli Biography From Nobel Lectures http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/lutuli/
Albert Lutuli - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia Redirected from albert Luthuli) albert john lutuli ( also known by his Zulu name "Mvumbi", his surname son of Christian missionary john Bunyan lutuli, and Mtonya Gumede, Luthuli was http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Luthuli
Extractions: (Redirected from Albert Luthuli Albert John Lutuli (also known by his Zulu name "Mvumbi", his surname is sometimes and probably more phonetically spelt "Luthuli") (1898? - 21 July ) was a South African teacher and politician . He was president of the African National Congress , at the time an umbrella organisation that led opposition to the white minority government in South Africa through the 1950s until his house arrest in 1958 effectively ended his direct role as head of the organization. He was awarded the 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, Luthuli was born in Rhodesia around 1898. His father died, and he and his mother returned to their ancestral home of Groutville Natal South Africa . He went to local Christian schools and he completed a teachers' course about . To provide financial support for his mother, he declined a scholarship to University of Fort Hare In he became secretary of the African Teacher's Association and in 1933 its president. He was also active in missionary work.
Albert John Luthuli -- Encyclopædia Britannica Cite this article. albert john Luthuli. born 1898, Rhodesia in full albert john Mvumbi Luthuli, Luthuli also spelled lutuli Zulu chief, teacher and religious leader, and president http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=50637&source=SEO
Extractions: Contemporary Africa Database ::: People Home About Contact Us Suggest ... Lists People: A B C D ... Z South African political activist and former president of the ANC Family Name: Luthuli Given Name: Albert John Title: Chief Dates: Gender: Male Country: South Africa Where there are no dates, achievements are ordered alphabetically Societal Activity Leaders of Political Movements
Albert John Luthuli -- Encyclopædia Britannica in full albert john Mvumbi Luthuli, Luthuli also spelled lutuli Zulu chief, teacherand religious leader, and president of the African National Congress (1952 http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=50637&tocid=0&query=albert michotte&ct=
Albert-John Lutuli Translate this page Ce Prix est pour le peuple dAfrique du Sud ». lutuli est lundes grands leaders de la non-violence et des droits de lhomme. http://www.nobel-paix.ch/bio/lutuli.htm
Extractions: Ce Prix est pour le peuple dAfrique du Sud African National Congress (ANC) et devient le président de l'organisation pour la région du Natal. Il organise une résistance non-violente. En 1956, il est arrêté, accusé de trahison et emprisonné puis il est relâché une année après. En 1960, 69 personnes sont tuées lors dune manifestation contre le contrôle des passeports. Luthuli brûle le sien. LANC devient illégal. Il est fait prisonnier et libéré pour cause de santé. Il retourne à Groutville où il est sous résidence surveillée. Lors de sa nomination au Prix Nobel de la paix il affirme :" ".
Recherches Par Pays Translate this page AFRIQUE DU SUD. 1967. lutuli, albert-john (1898-1967). 1984. Tutu, DesmondMpilo (1931-). 1993. de Klerk, Frederik (1936-). 1993. Mandela, Nelson (1918-). http://www.nobel-paix.ch/pays.htm
Extractions: AFRIQUE DU SUD Lutuli , Albert-John (1898-1967) Tutu , Desmond Mpilo (1931-) de Klerk , Frederik (1936-) Mandela , Nelson (1918-) ALLEMAGNE Stresemann , Gustav (1878-1929) Quidde , Ludwig (1858-1941) Von Ossietzky , Karl (1889-1938) Brandt , Willy (1913-1992) ARGENTINE Saavedra Lamas , Carlos (1878-1959) , Adolfo (1931-) AUTRICHE Von Suttner , Bertha (1843-1914) Fried , Alfred (1864-1921) BELGIQUE Beernaert , Auguste (1829-1912) La Fontaine , Henri (1854-1943) Pire , Georges (1910-1969) BIRMANIE Aung San Suu Kyi CANADA Pearson , Lester (1897-1979) COSTA-RICA , Oscar (1941) DANEMARK Bajer , Frederik (1837-1922) EGYPTE el-Sadate , Anouar (1918-1981) ETATS-UNIS Roosevelt Root , Elihu (1845-1937) Wilson , Woodrow (1856-1824) Dawes , Charles (1865-1951) Kellogg , Frank Billings (1856-1937) Addams , Jane (1860-1935) Butler , Nicholas Murray (1862-1947) Hull , Cordell (1871 -1955) Balch , Emily (1867-1961) Mott , John (1865-1955) Bunche , Ralph (1904-1971 Marshall , George Catlett (1880-1959) Pauling , Linus (1901-) Luther King , Martin (1929-1968) Borlaug , Norman (1914-) Kissinger , Henry A. (1923-)
Extractions: Entre temps, en 1927, il sest marié avec Nokhukanya Bengu, une enseignante comme lui et leur résidence permanente est située à Groutville. En 1933, les anciens de la communauté zoulou dont il est originaire (forte de 5000 personnes) lui demandent den devenir le chef. Lutuli hésite pendant deux ans car il est réticent à abandonner son métier denseignant. Il accepte finalement et pendant les dix sept années suivantes, il va se consacrer à sa fonction, en étant le représentant de sa communauté auprès du gouvernement central, en présidant les cérémonies traditionnelles, en recherchant de meilleures conditions de vie pour son peuple. Alors que les mesures dApartheid prises par le gouvernement sud africain devenaient de plus en plus restrictives pour les non-blancs dAfrique du Sud [ En 1948, les mesures dits dapartheid ont officiellement instauré un développement séparé entre blancs et noirs, en 1950 les "pass laws" restreignant la liberté de mouvement pour les noirs sont renforcées], Lutuli sengage de plus en plus, non plus seulement en faveur de sa communauté zoulou, mais en faveur de tous les noirs et finalement de tous les sud-africains victimes de linjustice de la ségrégation instaurée par lapartheid.
Albert Lutuli albert lutuli. albert john lutuli (also known by his Zulu name Mvumbi , hissurname is sometimes and probably more phonetically spelt Luthuli ) (1898? http://www.fact-index.com/a/al/albert_lutuli.html
Extractions: Main Page See live article Alphabetical index Albert John Lutuli (also known by his Zulu name "Mvumbi", his surname is sometimes and probably more phonetically spelt "Luthuli") (1898? - 21 July ) was a South African teacher and politician . He was president of the African National Congress , at the time an umbrella organisation that led opposition to the white minority government in South Africa through the 1950s until his house arrest in 1958 effectively ended his direct role as head of the organization. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in the ANC and its fight against apartheid This is a stub. Please help to improve this article! Nobel Committee information on Lutuli
Chief Albert Lutuli Benson in her biography notes that Luthuli, although christened albert john, preferredhis http//www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/lutuli/ is a comprehensive http://www.sahistory.org.za/pages/people/lutuli,aCHIEF.htm
Extractions: President-General of the African National Congress from December 1952 until his death in 1967, and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1960, Luthuli was the most widely known and respected African leader of his era. A latecomer to politics, he was nearly 50 when he first assumed national political office. Over the course of his political career his attitudes grew progressively more militant. At the annual conference of December 1952, Luthuli was elected ANC president-general by a large majority. Bans imposed in early 1953 and renewed in the following year prevented him from giving direction to the day-to-day activities of Congress, but as a country-bred "man of the people," combining the most inspiring qualities of Christian and traditional leadership, he provided a powerful symbol for an organisation struggling to rally mass support. He was re-elected president-general in 1955 and in 1958. Although bans confined him to his rural home throughout his presidency, he nevertheless was able to write statements and speeches for presentation at ANC conferences and occasionally circumstances permitted him to attend conference personally.