Trevor Huddleston

The Most Reverend
Trevor Huddleston
CR, KCMG
Archbishop of the Indian Ocean

Trevor Huddleston bust in Bedford, England
Province Province of the Indian Ocean
Diocese Mauritius
Installed 1978
Term ended 1983
Predecessor Edwin Curtis
Successor French Chang-Him
Other posts Bishop of Masasi
Bishop of Stepney
Bishop of Mauritius
Archbishop of the Indian Ocean
Orders
Ordination 1936 (deacon) 1937 (priest)
Consecration 1960
Personal details
Born (1913-06-15)15 June 1913
Bedford, England
Died 20 April 1998(1998-04-20) (aged 84)
Mirfield, West Yorkshire

Ernest Urban Trevor Huddleston (1913–1998) was an English Anglican bishop. He was the Bishop of Stepney in London before becoming the second Archbishop of the Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean. He was best known for his anti-apartheid activism and his book Naught for Your Comfort.

Early life

Huddleston was the son of Ernest Whiteside Huddleston and was born in Bedford, England, and educated at Lancing College (1927–1931),[1] Christ Church, Oxford, and at Wells Theological College. He joined an Anglican religious order, the Community of the Resurrection (CR), in 1939, taking vows in 1941,[2] having already served for three years as a curate at St Mark's Swindon.[2]

South Africa

In September 1940 Huddleston sailed to Cape Town, and in 1943 he went to the CR mission station at Sophiatown (Johannesburg, South Africa). He was sent there to build on the work of Raymond Raynes CR, whose monumental efforts there, building three churches, seven schools and three nursery schools catering for over 6,000 children, had proved to be so demanding that the community summoned him back to Mirfield in order to recuperate. Raynes was deeply concerned about who should be appointed to succeed him. He met Huddleston who had been appointed to nurse him while he was in the infirmary. As a result of that meeting, much to Huddleston's surprise as he had only been a member of the community for four years, Raynes was convinced that he had found his successor.[3]

Over the course of the next 13 years in Sophiatown, Huddleston developed into a much-loved priest and respected anti-apartheid activist, earning him the nickname Makhalipile ("dauntless one"). He fought against the apartheid laws, which were increasingly systematised by the Nationalist government which was voted in by the white electorate in 1948.[4] and in 1955 the ANC bestowed the rare Isitwalandwe award of honour on him at the famous Freedom Congress in Kliptown.[5] He was particularly concerned about the Nationalist Government's decision to bulldoze Sophiatown and forcibly remove all its inhabitants sixteen miles further away from Johannesburg. Despite Huddleston's efforts, these removals began on 9 February 1955 when Mandela describes Huddleston as one of the leaders of the opposition to the removal.[6] Among other work, he established the African Children's Feeding Scheme (which still exists today) and raised money for the Orlando Swimming Pools – the only place black children could swim in Johannesburg (until after 1994).[7]

There are many South Africans whose lives were changed by Huddleston; one of the most famous is Hugh Masekela, for whom Huddleston provided his first trumpet as a 14-year-old pupil in South Africa. Soon after the ‘Huddleston Jazz Band’ was formed, sparking a career of untold proportions across the globe for Masekela and his fellow South African, Jonas Gwangwa. Other notable persons who credit Huddleston with influencing their lives include Emeritus Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Sally Motlana, (activist and vice-chair of the South African Council of Churches during the 1970s); Emeritus Archbishop Khotso Makhulu and Robben Islander and later President of the Land Claims Court, Fikile Bam. Huddleston was close to O R Tambo, ANC President during the years of exile, from 1962 to 1990. They hosted many conferences, protests and actions together, in the face of fierce opposition from both Margaret Thatcher, and the South African government and their allies.

Return to England, Tanzania and Mauritius

Huddleston's community asked him to return to England in 1955 (and he left South Africa in early 1956), some say due the controversy he was attracting in speaking out against apartheid. However, the Superior at the time, Raymond Raynes, wrote that the decision to recall Trevor was made by Raynes himself. In 1956 he published his seminal work, Naught for your Comfort, and began work as the master of novices at CR's Mirfield mother house in West Yorkshire for two years[2] before becoming the prior of the order's priory in London[2] where he remained until his appointment as a bishop. He was consecrated Bishop of Masasi (Tanzania) in 1960, where he worked for eight years, primarily in re-organising the mission schools to be run by the newly independent government of Julius Nyerere, with whom he became a firm friend. He became Bishop of Stepney, a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of London.[8]

In 1974, Huddleston was questioned by the police in connection with complaints of alleged sexual abuse made by the parents of four boys who had been playing in Huddleston's office. In his statement Huddleston said "I have never done anything to harm a child ... Neither do I consider it indecent to pat a child on the bottom or pinch him ... The boys are telling the truth but the implications of indecency are completely absurd." The police report recommended charging him with four counts of gross indecency, but because of his high profile, the matter was referred to the director of public prosecutions, Sir Norman Skelton. Skelton decided not to charge him after consulting Labour party figures. According to some sources, the existence of the investigation and report was only uncovered as part of research for the 2004 publication of Piers McGrandle's biography (see below). However, there was no reason for the report to be public, if the case for prosecution had been dismissed.[9]

In his biography, Trevor Huddleston: Turbulent Priest, Piers McGrandle quotes Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Bishop George Ellison dismissing the claims as a plot by the South African secret service B.O.S.S. to discredit a prominent opponent of Apartheid. Tutu wrote the foreword for the McGrandle book, and Archbishop Rowan Williams the afterword. McGrandle was a part-time chaplain to Huddleston, and wanted to introduce Huddleston to a new generation. At a service to mark the Centenary of Huddleston's birth in June 2013, many people testified to the impact Huddleston had made on their faith and practice as Anglicans, and others, as activists.

Tutu, who as a little boy knew Huddleston and swears to his innocence, was particularly affronted by the suggestion that Huddleston was anything other than a protector of children. On 14 February 1995 he wrote a lengthy letter saying any suggestion of Huddleston's criminality was outrageous and adding that he could easily gather together a dozen black friends of Huddleston's acquaintance who would testify to his innocence and integrity.

On 14 February 1995 the then Archbishop of Cape Town wrote: "He [Huddleston] was an enormous thorn in the side of the apartheid regime and was effectively the real spokesman for the anti-apartheid movement for a considerable period. No one did more to keep apartheid on the world's agenda than he and therefore it would have been a devastating victory for the forces of evil and darkness had he been discredited", adding "How ghastly to want to besmirch such a remarkable man, so holy and so good. How utterly despicable and awful."

Bishop Gerald Ellison, the Bishop of London when Huddleston was Bishop of Stepney, also said that political enemies of Huddleston were involved.

Ellison said: "I want to make it absolutely clear that I have seen no evidence that Bishop Trevor was ever guilty of a criminal act. He undoubtedly had many enemies in South Africa and England who wanted to denigrate him, indeed, to destroy him." Ellison was also clear that neither he, nor his legal advisers, believed anyone had the right to impede justice if there was any real evidence of guilt.

After 10 years in England, Huddleston was appointed (1978) as the Bishop of Mauritius, a diocese of the Province of the Indian Ocean. Later in the same year he was elected as the Archbishop of the Province of the Indian Ocean.[2] In 1984, he was succeeded by the Rt Revd Rex Donat as Bishop of Mauritius.

After retirement

After his retirement from episcopal office in 1983, Huddleston continued anti-apartheid work, having become President of the anti-apartheid movement in 1981. He continued to campaign against the imprisonment of children in South Africa, and was able to vote as an honorary South African in the first democratic elections on 27 April 1994. He briefly returned to South Africa but found it too difficult with his diabetic condition and increasing frailty, and returned to Mirfield. In October 1994 he was involved in the establishment of the Living South Africa Memorial, the UK's memorial to all those who lost lives under political violence, at St Martin in the Fields church, London, which raised funds for education in the newly democratic South Africa, and campaigned for ongoing investment in the region, under a call to action 'It takes more than a vote to get over apartheid'.

In 1994 he received honours from Tanzania (Torch of Kilimanjaro) and was awarded the Indira Gandhi Award for Peace, Disarmament and Development. In the 1998 New Year Honours he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG).[10]

Death and legacy

Huddleston died at Mirfield, West Yorkshire, England, in 1998. A window in memory of him is in Lancing College chapel and was visited by Desmond Tutu. They had become friends when Huddleston visited a young Tutu in hospital when he was ill with TB. They later worked together opposing apartheid. The Huddleston Centre in Hackney has been delivering youth provision to disabled young people living in Hackney for over 30 years, and continues to do so. The centre bears Huddleston's name after he intervened to ensure that part of a church building was converted to provide an accessible nursery, play (and latterly youth club) space for disabled young people in Hackney, regardless of their faith. The Trevor Huddleston Memorial Centre in Sophiatown was established in 1999 following Huddleston's death and the interment of his ashes in the garden of Christ the King Church in Sophiatown where he had been active and then supervised mission activity for 13 years. The Centre delivers youth development programmes in Johannesburg as well as heritage and cultural projects promoting Huddleston's belief in developing the potential of every young person and his commitment to non-racialism, multi-faith issues and social justice.

Hugh Masekela, South African trumpeter, composer and singer, gave the Fr Huddleston Memorial Lecture at a special event in central London to mark the end of Huddleston’s Centenary Year (June 2013-June 2014), and the 20th anniversary of democratic elections. In his autobiography ‘Still Grazing’, published in 2004, Masekela talks about that first trumpet given to him by Huddleston, and how it did not stop there, as Huddleston later secured a gift of a new trumpet from Louis Armstrong. Aged 21, Hugh left South Africa for the UK where Huddleston helped him secure a place at the Guildhall School of Music, and then he went to New York, where he began to craft his signature Afro-jazz style, under both Armstrong and Gillespie. Masekela was joined at the event by special guest and New York-born jazz pianist, Larry Willis, whom ‘Bra Hugh’ first met in those early days in Manhattan.

Hosted by the Trevor Huddleston Memorial Centre (based in Sophiatown, Johannesburg), the Gala Evening raised funds for the work of the Memorial Centre, to help young entrepreneurs get a foothold in the creative industries in South Africa. The Memorial Centre runs training and incubation for entrepreneurs, and awards the Fr Huddleston Arts Bursary to one young South African annually, giving them experience in a UK community arts setting for 3–6 months. In this way, the legacy of Huddleston in assisting young people is continued.

Writings

Books

Huddleston wrote five books, the seminal two being:

Prayer for Africa

A well-known prayer of Huddleston's is the "Prayer for Africa".[11] It has been recited throughout South Africa, Tanzania and other African countries.

God bless Africa,
Guard her people,
Guide her leaders,
And give her peace.

Alternative version (with emphasis on children):

God Bless Africa,
Guard her children,
Guide her leaders,
And give her peace, for Jesus Christ's sake. Amen.

Another alternative version:

God bless Africa, God bless Africa,
Guard her children, guide her leaders.
God bless Africa, God bless Africa,
God bless Africa and bring her peace.

See also

Notes and references

  1. Archbishop Desmond Tutu visits Lancing College at the Wayback Machine (archived June 8, 2013)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Archbishops' Council of the Church of England (2011). "Crockford Clerical Directory". Church House Publishing. Retrieved 2011-10-07.
  3. Wilkinson 1992, p. 229.
  4. Mandela 1994, p. 127.
  5. "Isitwalandwe / Seaparankoe the Highest Award of Honour". ANC. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  6. Mandela 1994, pp. 180 - 181.
  7. Meredith 2010, p. 95.
  8. The London Gazette: no. 44628. p. 7491. 5 July 1968. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
  9. "It was different then...". Private Eye (Pressdram Ltd) (1342): 29. 14 June 2013. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved 2013-06-21.
  10. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 54993. p. 3. 30 December 1997. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
  11. Stewart 1999, p. 243.

Further reading

External links

Anglican Communion titles
Preceded by
Wilfrid Lewis Mark Way
Bishop of Masasi
1959 - 1968
Succeeded by
Gayo Hilary Chisonga
Preceded by
Francis Evered Lunt
Bishop of Stepney
1968 1978
Succeeded by
James Lawton Thompson
Preceded by
Ghislain Elwyn Emmanuel
Bishop of Mauritius
1978 1983
Succeeded by
Luc Rex Victor Donat
Preceded by
Ernest Edwin Curtis
Archbishop of the Indian Ocean
1978 1983
Succeeded by
French Kitchener Chang-Him
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