Person of the Year 2008
Church leaders are often criticised for failing to give moral leadership on the real issues our society is facing. They are sometimes portrayed as colourless ecclesiastical automata repeating tired phrases from an out-of-print lexicon. If they are said to have any colour, it is typically "grey". They frequently appear lost in translation in the media age, so disconnected from the world around them that they should be offered weekly viewing of a Zeitgeist tape to bring them up to speed.
Not so the Archbishop of York, our Person of the Year 2008. Dr John Sentamu is a master of morally-charged gestures that regularly capture the public's imagination, and he is one of the UK's most outspoken public leaders. The Daily Telegraph was right to describe him as "a world-class showman who is divinely inspired."
In some ways, he is a mould-breaking maverick within an ancient institution, willing to speak out and speak up, often in institutionally off-message terms. This year, the tough-talking archbishop called for the brutal regime of Robert Mugabe to be overthrown by military force, told the UK's immigration minister that his policies lacked mercy and compassion, described those in the business world who had made money by deliberately underselling shares in banks as "bank robbers and asset strippers", and challenged the morality of the government's anti-recession policy.
Dr Sentamu has a talent for deploying a telling phrase or compelling gesture with maximum effect. When he speaks, people sit up and listen. Fearing that those wearing hoodies were being stereotyped because of their choice of fashion, the archbishop put on a purple hoodie and preached against the demonization of young people. Last year, he cut up his clerical collar on live television and pledged not to wear it again until Robert Mugabe is out of office. He waded into the public debate about religious symbolism when British Airways told its staff not to wear cross necklaces while on duty. The archbishop said the policy was just "nonsense".
John Sentamu was born and raised in rural Uganda. He studied law, trained as a barrister and served as a High Court judge all before reaching the age of 25. Surviving several beatings under the regime of Idi Amin, he was forced into exile in England after he refused to co-operate in Amin's racist programme of expulsion of Ugandan Asians. While serving on the Ugandan bench, he once sent ten innocent people to prison because it was the only way to save them from summary execution. Had he stayed in Uganda, he would almost certainly have been murdered by Amin's thugs.
Dr Sentamu's decision to seek ordination followed the arrest and killing of his friend and mentor Archbishop Janani Luwum in 1977. The achbishop says he made this vow in response to Luwum's murder: "You kill my friend, I take his place." Following theological training at Cambridge, including a doctorate, he worked as a priest of the Church of England in London. Idi Amin clearly did not have a monopoly on racism; Sentamu's home was targeted by the National Front. Later, he became Britain's first black bishop, serving as Bishop of Stepney, then as Bishop of Birmingham. He also served as an advisor to the Stephen Lawrence inquiry team, whose final report labelled the Metropolitan Police "institutionally racist". Since his consecration as Britain's first Archbishop in 2005, Sentamu has indicted his own institution, the Church of England, with the same charge.
This is a church leader who knows his own mind and feels free to share it with the rest of us decisively, directly, memorably, and often flamboyantly. He proves that seriousness and gravitas can be sustained with humour and wit. And the public love him for it. In June, he completed a 13,000ft skydive, at the age of 58, to raise money for Armed Forces charities. He is en route to becoming a national institution; but there is no evidence that the fame is going to his head. When he was invited to join the house for a series of Celebrity Big Brother, the archbishop's staff politely declined the invitation with a predictably pithy reply: "We don't do celebrity."
Comment number 1.
At 1st Jan 2009, Heliopolitan wrote:Will, a good choice (even though as an atheist I have my views as to the relevance of the institutions he serves - perhaps he is proving that more depends on the Occupant than the Office).
However, perhaps having done the Person and the Deputy Person of the Year previously, you could have done the Person and the *Anti*person of the Year for 2009, and of course Mugabe could have filled that complementary role.
-H
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Comment number 2.
At 1st Jan 2009, Mgnbar wrote:Happy 2009 to Will And Testament posters!
Nice to have not a celebrity as our person of the year, good choice I think.
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Comment number 3.
At 2nd Jan 2009, Orville Eastland wrote:From my reading, you made an excellent, and unexpected, choice.
Oddly enough, while I dislike organized religion (emphasis on the first word) and denominational hierarchies, and while I am a nonconformist in both senses of the word, I would like to meet Archbishop Sentamu. (I'd also like to meet the Archbishop of Canterbury sometime- I missed him when he came to town. Plus, I'd like to meet an ex-Moderator of the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland, Alexander "Sandy" McDonald- and, no, it's not just because of his famous son...)
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Comment number 4.
At 2nd Jan 2009, jovialPTL wrote:Sentamu is a humanist Christian in the truest sense. He is very learned, both in law and theology, and extremely able in rhetoric. Would that his senior colleague in Canterbury had some of his public theology skills.
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Comment number 5.
At 2nd Jan 2009, U11831742 wrote:I agree ... Sentamu is a cut above the rest. Like your use of the word 'humanist' PTL ... were you trying to provoke Brian!?
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Comment number 6.
At 2nd Jan 2009, Heliopolitan wrote:Oh, I don't think it'll provoke him any more than me saying I'm an Atheistic Christian. Hey, maybe Semtamu's similar. Maybe we all are.
xoxo
-H
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Comment number 7.
At 3rd Jan 2009, neilglover wrote:Will,
Good choice.
I don't think this is John Sentamu any more
Neil
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Comment number 8.
At 3rd Jan 2009, nobledeebee wrote:Here the "world class showman" shows off his sense of humour with an uncanny impersonation of another leading cleric
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Comment number 9.
At 4th Jan 2009, petermorrow wrote:Ah Helio, 'Atheist Christian' isn't all that provocative; I'm sure we all pretty much know what you mean by it. (Although it did make me think twice the first time I heard you used it.
You'd probably be happy with something like the preservation of christian symbols and rituals as useful social myth and practice. And I suppose you have a point; christianity is useful for community focal points, and holidays, Snowmas, Easter Bunny Weekend, All Hallows Eve, St. Paddy's Day and weddings and funerals and community singing and opening of Parliaments and other such public buildings. Maybe some day the office of Archbishop of Canterbury will be an 'honorary' position, like the freedom of a city, or a mayor, changing hands once a year and appointed to an upstanding citizen, and maybe our church buildings will increasingly be public building such as museums and libraries and community centers and coffee houses, with public information points relating to our christian cultural past, with stories like George and the Dragon, and selling biscuits in the shape of Stars of David and crosses. (and probably pizza's with an image of Jesus in pepperoni.) And all that's fine, and it bothers me not one whit, because whatever it is, it is not the Church of Jesus Christ, and it is not the Kingdom of Heaven. And I guess Sentamu has grasped the difference between the robes and the Kingdom, and I guess that is what makes him stand out from some of the rest.
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Comment number 10.
At 7th Jan 2009, dennisjunior1 wrote:William:
A great person of the year 2008...
~Dennis Junior~
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