Overview
    Identifiers
    Inventory Number
    2627BB61
    Site Name
    Desmond Tutu House
    Site Category
    References
    Reference Types
    Book
    Citation
    Allen, John. 2006. Rabble-Rouser for Peace: the Authorised Biography of Desmond Tutu. London: Rider, 2006.
    Reference Types
    Book
    Citation
    de Boulay, Shirley. Tutu: Voice of the Voiceless. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1988.
    Reference Types
    Newspaper
    Citation
    Gifford, Gill. 2007. Tutu’s Nobel Prize Recovered After a Burglary. The Star, 11 June 2007.
    Record Administration
    Author
    Zoleka.Ntabeni
    Last modified
    Thursday, May 2, 2024 - 18:19
    Archaeology Recordings
    Identifiers
    Inventory Reference
    Recording date
    Primary?
    No
    Built Environment Recordings
    Identifiers
    Inventory Reference
    Recording date
    Recorders
    Primary?
    Yes
    Classifications
    Building type
    Architectural features

    The original structure has been extensively re-modeled and added to by the Tutus

    Associated People
    History of use
    Use Period Use
      Location
      Location
      Mapping
      -26.239287, 27.909963
      Gauteng
      • City of Johannesburg
      Grading
      Grading
      Grade II
      Grading Date
      GradingComment

      Grading by:

      Statement of Significance

      The Tutu House has been associated with several different periods in Desmond Tutu’s ministry and in the life of his family.  The site is strongly associated with a religious and political figure known nationally and internationally for his moral authority shown in the anti-apartheid movement, and for the continuing role he has played since the demise of apartheid in the struggle for peace and justice.  The chapel illustrates the depth of Tutu’s religious calling and spirituality.
      The house is located on a Vilakazi Street, an area rich in political history, around the corner from the matchbox house of Nelson Mandela.  Vilakazi Street is the only street in the world where two Nobel Peace Prize winners lived: Desmond Tutu (1984) and Nelson Mandela (1993).

      Media
      Images uploaded directly to Site
      Images uploaded to linked Site Recordings