Vol No: 81,
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Dog collar protest- santamu
IN a very dramatic and well rehearsed fashion Rt. Hon & Most. Revd. Dr. John Sentamu, Archbishop of York, the second in command of the church of England once again ceased the moment to make a statement. This time it was not about Hoodies, or about him praying and fasting for peace in the middles east. This time it was about calling for change in Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe.

Speaking in an interview on BBC1’s Sunday AM programme, Dr. John Sentamu removed his clerical collar and cut it up into pieces live on air saying that President Mugabe had “taken people’s identity .and cut it to pieces” prompting the Archbishop to do the same.

Dr. Sentamu said that his clerical collar, also known as a dog collar, “is what I wear to identify myself, that I’m a clergyman”.

 “You know what Mr Mugabe has done? He’s taken people’s identity, and literally, if you don’t mind, cut it to pieces, and in the end there’s nothing.” As he cut his own dog collar into pieces the Archbishop declared “As far as I’m concerned, I’m not going to wear a dog collar, until Mr Mugabe’s gone”. The Archbishop also chastised African leaders at the Africa- EU summit for their support of Mr. Mugabe whist the people of the country continued to suffer: “Because what is going on for me, there is this pernicious, self destructing racism. A white man does it the whole world cries. A black person does it, there is a certain sense oh this is colonialism. I’m sorry I don’t buy this. Africa and all the world have got to liberate Africa from this mental slavery and this colonial mentality - whenever there’s anything you blame somebody else instead of yourself”. The Archbishop called on people to “pray, march and protest” about the situation in Zimbabwe and in Darfur:

“I think what I want to say is what happened to, during the time of Ian Smith in this country and apartheid South Africa. We prayed. We marched, protested. We collected money. As Christmas comes around spare a pound, spare a pound for child starving in Darfur and in Zimbabwe. Let this money be collected so that when a time comes people can actually have their houses and their homes rebuilt. And to me that’s the greatest thing we can actually do as a nation.” Dr. Sentamu criticised South African President Thabo Mbeke for his failure to put pressure on Mr, Mugabe who had turned his country from a “bread basket into a basket case”. “(Mugabe) has actually taken a country really into a sheer chaos and he’s been so brutal that in the long run the world has got to say, if the South African people (and leaders) won’t do it, something’s got to happen,” said the Archbishop.

The Archbishop of York who is known for making dramatic statements once wore a hoodie as he urged people not to judge teenagers by their choice of fashion. “Ninetynine per cent of those who wear hoodies are law-abiding citizens.”Dr John Sentamu told a conference on youth work last year.

 

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