Tutu's daughter loses S.African church license after gay marriage | Inquirer News

Tutu’s daughter loses S.African church license after gay marriage

/ 08:06 AM May 25, 2016

Retired Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu. AP FILE PHOTO

Retired Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu. AP FILE PHOTO

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Desmond Tutu’s daughter has been forced to give up her duties as a priest in South Africa’s Anglican church after she married a woman, she told AFP on Tuesday.

Reverend Canon Mpho Tutu-van Furth can no longer preside at holy communion, weddings, baptisms or funerals after handing in her license because the church does not recognize gay marriage.

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She said her father, the retired archbishop and celebrated anti-apartheid campaigner, was “sad but not surprised” at the news.

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“The canon (law) of the South African Church states that marriage is between one man and one woman,” Tutu-van Furth said in an email.

“After my marriage… the Bishop of Saldanha Bay was advised that he must revoke my license. I offered to return my license rather than require that he take it from me.”

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Mpho and Marceline Tutu-van Furth have been on honeymoon on the Indonesian island of Bali after holding a wedding party outside Cape Town earlier this month.

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Desmond Tutu, 84, who has been in frail health, attended the celebrations with his wife.

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He has previously spoken out in favor of gay marriage.

Marceline Tutu-van Furth is an Amsterdam-based professor specializing in pediatric infections.

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The couple — who are both divorced and have children — officially tied the knot in the Netherlands in December.

“My wife and I meet across almost every dimension of difference. Some of our differences are obvious; she is tall and white, I am black and vertically challenged,” Mpho told the South African City Press newspaper.

“Ironically, coming from a past where difference was the instrument of division, it is our sameness that is now the cause of distress,” she said in a reference to apartheid.

Senior local priest Bruce Jenneker told AFP that the Saldanha diocese had received Mpho’s license with “sadness”.

“It was a great pity that it had to happen,” he added.

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Same-sex marriage was legalized in South Africa in 2006.

TAGS: Desmond Tutu, News, South Africa

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