Encyclopedia: Albert Luthuli albert john lutuli (also known by his Zulu name Mvumbi , his surnameis sometimes and probably more phonetically spelt Luthuli ) (1898? http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Albert-Luthuli
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Lutuli, Albert lutuli, albert (john Mvumbi), lutuli also spelled LUTHULI (b. 1898, Rhodesiad.July 21, 1967, Stanger, S.Af.), Zulu chief, teacher and religious leader, and http://cyberspacei.com/jesusi/peace/non_resistance/lutuli.htm
Extractions: Non-Resistant Non-Violence Lutuli, Albert (John Mvumbi) , Lutuli also spelled LUTHULI (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. (see also apartheid race relations Albert John Mvumbi (Zulu: "Continuous Rain") Lutuli was born in Rhodesia, where his father, John Bunyan Lutuli, 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 was 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 Lutuli married Nokukhanya Bhengu, a teacher and granddaughter of a clan chief. In 1936 Lutuli 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.
Luthuli, Albert J. In 1967 Luthuli was killed by a train as he walked along a railroadbridge near his home. ? (albert (john Mvumbi) lutuli). http://cyberspacei.com/jesusi/peace/nobel/luthuli.htm
Extractions: Nobel PEACE Prize Winners Luthuli, Albert John (1898?-1967), South African political leader and the first African to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Luthuli won international acclaim for his efforts to use nonviolence to end state-sponsored racial discrimination in South Africa. In addition to teaching, Luthuli served as a lay minister of the Methodist Church. In 1935 residents of Groutvilles Umvoti Mission Reserve elected Luthuli as their chief, and he assumed the post the following year. Leading the community of 5000 required all of Luthulis efforts, forcing him to give up his teaching career. Luthuli became increasingly politicized as he tried to improve Groutville. The restrictive policies of the government, which was controlled exclusively by South Africas white minority, frustrated Luthulis efforts at every turn. In the wake of World War II (1939-1945), the government further restricted black rights as part of a system that became known as apartheid ("separateness" in the Afrikaans language). Under apartheid, the government instituted policies that controlled virtually every aspect of black life, including employment, travel, education, marriage, and housing. When the restrictions lapsed briefly in 1954, Luthuli resumed organizing popular opposition, and his actions again brought police attention. In 1956 police arrested Luthuli and 155 other opposition leaders on charges of treason. A year later, prosecutors dropped the charges against Luthuli and 64 other defendants. The court acquitted the remaining accused in 1961.
Albert John Luthuli Rain ) Luthuli was born in Rhodesia, where his father, john Bunyan Luthuli Mary Benson,Chief albert lutuli of South Africa (1963), is a short biography, and http://www.nobel-winners.com/Peace/albert_john_luthuli.html
Extractions: 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: Awards Won By Albert John Lutuli 123Awards hardwork is paid in form of awards. The biggest english dictionary RealDictionary.com. Awards of albert john lutuli. OTHER-NOBEL, 1960, PEACE. http://www.123awards.com/artist/4038.asp
WIEM: Luthuli Albert John Luthuli, lutuli, albert john (18981967), polityk poludniowoafrykanski. Luthuli,lutuli, albert john (1898-1967), polityk poludniowoafrykanski. http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/00aefc.html
Extractions: Luthuli, Lutuli, Albert John (1898-1967), polityk po³udniowoafrykañski. Walczy³ o zniesienie dyskryminacji czarnej ludno¶ci. Przez wiele lat by³ nauczycielem. Od 1952 przewodnicz±cy Afrykañskiego Kongresu Narodowego , zdelegalizowanego w 1960. 1956-1957 wiêzieñ polityczny, od 1961 w areszcie domowym. W 1960 laureat pokojowej Nagrody Nobla . Autobiografia Z domu niewoli (1962, wydanie polskie 1966). WIEM zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry
Biography: Chief Albert Luthuli albert john Mvumbi Luthuli was born sometime around 1898 near Bulawayo,Southern Rhodesia, the son of a Seventh Day Adventist missionary. http://africanhistory.about.com/library/biographies/blbio-lutuli.htm
Extractions: zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About History African History Home ... African Stencils zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Apartheid Slavery Biographies Era: Human Origins ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb); Subscribe to the About African History newsletter. Search African History Chief Albert Luthuli Africa's first winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace and president of the ANC until his death (under mysterious circumstances) in 1967. Related Resources Glossary: Banned Date of death: 21 July 1967, railway track near home at Stanger, Natal, South Africa. Albert John Mvumbi Luthuli was born sometime around 1898 near Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia, the son of a Seventh Day Adventist missionary. In 1908 he was sent to his ancestral home at Groutville, Natal where he went to the mission school. Having first trained as a teacher at Edendale, near Pietermaritzburg, Luthuli attended additional courses at Adam's College (in 1920), and went on to become part of the college staff. He remained at the college until 1935. Albert Luthuli was deeply religious, and during his time at Adam's College he became a lay preacher. His Christian beliefs acted as a foundation for his approach to political life in South Africa at a time when many of his contemporaries were calling for a more militant response to Apartheid.
Nobels Fredspris Gjennom 100 år - Albert John Lutuli 1960 albert john lutuli (18981967), Sør-Afrika. Aktive Fredsreiser TRAVELFOR PEACE AS Postboks 19 N-4951 Risør Telf 37 15 39 00 Faks 37 15 43 58. http://www.aktive-fredsreiser.no/biblioteket/nobels_fredspris/1960_albert_john_l
Extractions: Albert John Lutuli was born in what he estimates to have been 1898 in Rhodesia. He grew up to be the chief of his tribe and president-general of the African National Congress (ANC). As the leader of millions of black Africans in their non-violent campaign for civil rights, Lutuli united the two opposing cultures of the Zulu and the Christian-democratic. Anyone who knows of the accomplishments of Lutuli would agree that he was a very noble, giving, loving, and persistent man in his fight for equality of all men. It is because of these valiant traits and his impeccable character that I have chosen Lutuli to be the most important peace hero of the 20th Century. In 1954, a meeting was called to protest the removal of blacks from Sophiatown to Meadowsland. Lutuli was restricted from speaking at this meeting because the whites knew that this would jeopardize the power and control that they held over the blacks. In order to prevent the other blacks from receiving the powerful words of Lutuli, he was once again banned from leaving his home for another two years. Lutuli ignored these limitations and continued to participate in many mass meetings, but was again placed under a travel ban for an additional five years. Despite the continuous efforts of the government to suppress him, Lutuli adamantly fought for the rights of people.
Extractions: Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Albert John Lutuli (also known by his Zulu This article is about the African ethnic group. For the letter Z (Zulu in the NATO phonetic alphabet), see Z. For Zulu time, see Coordinated Universal Time. Zulus Click the link for more information. name "Mvumbi", his surname is sometimes and probably more phonetically spelt "Luthuli") (1898? - 21 July July 21 is the 202nd day (203rd in leap years) of the year in the Gregorian Calendar, with 165 days remaining. 1298 - Battle of Falkirk (1298): England's Edward Longshank defeats William Wallace's Scottish rebels 1718 - Treaty of Passarowitz signed. 1774 - Russia and the Ottoman Empire sign the Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji ending the Russo-Turkish War, 1768-74.
Kituo Cha Katiba >> Albert Lutuli - Profile Chief albert john lutuli, the beloved PresidentGeneral of the African National Congress(SA); was one of Africa s greatest political figures of our times; the http://www.kituochakatiba.co.ug/luthuli.htm
Extractions: A LBERT J OHN L UTULI Chief Albert John Lutuli, the beloved President-General of the African National Congress (SA); was one of Africa's greatest political figures of our times; the undisputed leader of and respected spokesman for South Africa's 14 million oppressed, exploited and humiliated inhabitants. He passed from the scene of active struggle for political rights and national liberation in July,1967, when it is alleged he was run over by a train. He was a 1960 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. He was a profound thinker, a man of powerful logic with a keen sense of justice; a man of lofty principles, a bold and courageous fighter and a statesman He was a true African nationalist and an unflinching patriot. Although he grew up under tribal conditions and surroundings, he was uncompromising against racialism; tribalism and all forms of racial and sectional exclusiveness. He believed in and fought for full political, economic and social opportunities for the oppressed people of South Africa regardless of colour, creed, nationality or racial origin. A staunch anti-imperialist, anti-colonialist, he fought and obtained the co-operation of all anti-apartheid, anti-imperialist progressive movements and organisations in South Africa.
MSN Encarta - Luthuli, Albert John Luthuli, albert john. Luthuli, albert john (18981967), South African politicalleader and the first African to win the Nobel Peace Prize. , lutuli Speaks. http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761578944/Luthuli_Albert_John.html
Extractions: Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 60,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, articles from 100 leading magazines, homework tools, daily math help and more for $4.95/month or $29.95/year (plus applicable taxes.) Learn more. This article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Luthuli, Albert John Luthuli, Albert John (1898-1967), South African political leader and the first African to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Luthuli won international acclaim... Related Items see also Nobel Prizes apartheid 12 items Multimedia Selected Web Links The Nobel Prize in Peace 1960 Lutuli Speaks 2 items Quotations Courage: Let your courage rise with⦠2 items Want more Encarta? Become a subscriber today and gain access to: Daily Math Help Literature Guides Researcher Tools Paper-Writing Guides 60,000 + articles
North Coast: Luthuli, Albert John And Gravesite Luthuli, albert john (18981967), South African political leader and the first Africanto As part of his new position, lutuli began to travel throughout South http://dolphincoast.kzn.org.za/dolphin/about/43.xml
Extractions: North Coast Home zoom zoom Luthuli, Albert John (1898-1967), South African political leader and the first African to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Luthuli won international acclaim for his efforts to use nonviolence to end state- sponsored racial discrimination in South Africa. Luthuli was born in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), the son of well- respected members of the Zulu ethnic group. His father, an evangelical minister and interpreter, died soon after Luthuli's birth. When Luthuli was about 10 years old, his family moved to a Seventh-Day Adventist mission in the northern Natal region of South Africa, which is now part of KwaZulu-Natal. The mission offered no educational opportunities, so Luthuli's mother sent him to live with his uncle in Groutville, a community on the Natal coast. Luthuli proved a sharp student, and he eventually earned an advanced teaching credential from Adams Mission State College, one of the country's most prestigious schools open to blacks. Luthuli began teaching at the school upon his graduation. In 1927 Luthuli married Nokukhanya Bhengu, a fellow teacher. In addition to teaching, Luthuli served as a lay minister of the Methodist Church. In 1935 residents of Groutville's Umvoti Mission Reserve elected Luthuli as their chief, and he assumed the post the following year. Leading the community of 5000 required all of Luthuli's efforts, forcing him to give up his teaching career. Luthuli became increasingly politicized as he tried to improve Groutville. The restrictive policies of the government, which was controlled exclusively by South Africa's white minority, frustrated Luthuli's efforts at every turn. In the wake of World War II (1939- 1945), the government further restricted black rights as part of a system that became known as apartheid ('separateness' in the Afrikaans language). Under apartheid, the government instituted policies that controlled virtually every aspect of black life, including employment, travel, education, marriage, and housing.
Lutuli Pages albert john Luthuli was born around 1898 in Bulawayo (Zimbabwe) where his fatherwas a catechist teacher. His ancestral home was the Umvoti Mission Reserve. http://scnc.udw.ac.za/doc/TEXTS/dc/dclutuli.htm
Extractions: Albert Luthuli - a brief profile Albert John Luthuli was born around 1898 in Bulawayo (Zimbabwe) where his father was a catechist teacher. His ancestral home was the Umvoti Mission Reserve. In 1908 the Luthuli family returned to Natal and settled in Vryheid. In order to obtain an education Luthuli went to live with his uncle at Groutville, where his early schooling was at the American Board Mission school. In 1917 he qualified as a teacher at Edenvale and was principal of Blaauwbosch intermediary school for two years. In 1920 he received a bursary to study at Adams College and in 1922 joined the College's staff as a lecturer at the Teachers Training College. In 1928 he was elected secretary of the African Teacher Association and founder of the Zulu Language and Culture Society. In 1933 some elders of the tribe approached Luthuli and asked him to consider succeeding his uncle as chief. Although the position of chief meant a vast reduction in his salary Luthuli decided that service to his community came first and he left teaching in 1935 to act as the elected chief at Groutville from 1 January 1936. In an attempt to improve the economy of Groutville he helped to revive the Groutville Cane Growers Association. Between 1945 and 1948 he was elected to the Natal executive of the Native Representative Council. In 1952 he was deposed as Chief by Government decree. The strongest single influence on Luthuli's life and thoughts came from his Christian commitment. He was a lay preacher in the local congregation. For many years he served as chairman of the Congregational churches of the American Board Mission and became chairman of the Natal Missionary Conference. He also served on the executive committee of the Christian Council of South Africa, the forerunner of the South African Council of Churches. Luthuli stressed "sacrificial service" and dedicated his life to the cause and service of his fellow men.
Main Page :Gandhi Lutuli King Mandela : A Legacy It focuses on aspects of the lives, works and teachings of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi,albert john Luthuli, Martin Luther King and Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela. http://scnc.udw.ac.za/doc/TEXTS/dc/dctext.htm
Extractions: GANDHI LUTHULI KING MANDELA : A LEGACY FOR THE FUTURE GANDHI LUTHULI KING MANDELA GANDHI, LUTHULI, KING, MANDELA AN EXHIBITION This exhibition is presented by the Documentation Center of the University of Durban-Westville, in association with the American Consulate, the Indian Consulate and the Local History Museum. It focuses on aspects of the lives, works and teachings of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Albert John Luthuli, Martin Luther King and Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela. Gandhi sowed and nurtured the seeds of non-violent direct action against social injustices during his twenty one year sojourn in South Africa. His experiments with Truth matured during his freedom struggles in India, which finally culminated in India's independence from Britain. Dr. Luthuli's deep Christian commitment together with the Gandhian philosophy of Satyagraha helped define the non-violent policy adopted by the African National Congress in its defiance campaign against racial oppression in South Africa. In 1961, Dr. Luthuli was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Dr. King Jr. successfully employed non-violence as a strategy in his civil rights campaigns against racial discrimination in the United States of America. Dr. King's non-violent and peaceful demonstrations played a significant role in paving the way for US enactment of legislation prohibiting racial discrimination in the USA. In 1964, he became the youngest Nobel Peace Laureate.
Extractions: Where the rainbow ends there is going to be a place brother, where the world can sing all sorts of songs, and we're going to sing together, brother, you and I, though you're white and I am not. It's going to be a sad song, brother, because we don't know the tune. But we can learn, brother, you and I. There's no such tune as a black tune. There's no such tune as a white tune. There's only music, brother. And it's music we're going to sing where the rainbow ends. In 1814 the British took formal sovereignty over the Cape of Good Hope from the Dutch who since 1652 had been using Table Bay as a way station between Amsterdam and the Dutch East Indies. By the advent of the British takeover, Dutch, German, and French Calvinists comprised the majority of several thousand European colonists.
Kenneth Wilburn's Curriculum Vitae albert john lutuli and Moise Tshombe in Frank Magill, editor, Great Lives inHistory the Twentieth Century (Salem Press, 1990), 138791 and 2300-05; http://core.ecu.edu/hist/wilburnk/cv.htm
Nobel Peace Prize Winners leader. albert john lutuli , President of the South Africal liberationmovement, the African National Congress. albert SCHWEITZER http://www.namenerds.com/uucn/listofweek/nobel.html
Extractions: ADOLFO PEREZ ESQUIVEL , Argentina, architect, sculptor and human rights leader. ALBERT JOHN LUTULI , President of the South Africal liberation movement, the African National Congress. ALBERT SCHWEITZER , Missionary surgeon, Founder Lambaréné Hospital in République du Gabon. ALFONSO GARCÍA ROBLES , diplomat, delegate to the United Nations General Assembly on Disarmament, former Secretary for Foreign Affairs . ALFRED HERMANN FRIED, Austria. Journalist. Founder of the peace journal Die Waffen Nieder (later renamed Die Friedenswarte). ALVA MYRDAL , former Cabinet Minister, diplomat, delegate to United Nations General Assembly on Disarmament, writer. ANDREI DMITRIEVICH SAKHAROV , Soviet nuclear physicist. Campaigner for human rights. ARISTIDE BRIAND Foreign Minister. Negotiator of the Locarno Treaty and the Briand-Kellogg Pact. ARTHUR HENDERSON Former Foreign Secretary. Chairman of the League of Nations Disarmament Conference 1932-1934. AUGUSTE MARIE FRANÇOIS BEERNAERT, Belgium. Former Prime Minister. Member of the Belgian Parliament. Member of the Cour Internationale d'Arbitrage (International Court of Arbitration) at the Hague.
Albert Lutuli -- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Online Article Authoritative, engaging, and easy to use. Visit Britannica Store, BritannicaConcise Encyclopedia, lutuli , albert (john Mvumbi) Britannica Concise. http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article?eu=396061