Peter Kalangula
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Peter Tanyangenge Kalangula (born 1926) is a Namibian political and religious leader.
[edit] Biography
Peter Kalangula was born at Omafo in Ovamboland on 1926-12-03, and after studying at St Mary's School, Odibo trained as a teacher through correspondence. In 1966 he began theological studies to train to be an Anglican priest. He studied at first at the Federal Thological Seminary in Alice, South Africa, and then at St Bede's Theological College, Mthatha.
He was ordained as a deacon in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa, but was not ordained as a priest because of a strong disagreement with Bishop Colin Winter in November 1969. As an Ovambo nationalist, Kalangula wanted a separate Anglican diocese in Ovamboland, separate from the Diocese of Damaraland. He then broke away and formed the Ovamboland Anglican Church as an African independent church, with the support of South African government officials and the Security Police. The Ovamboland Anglican Church was latter associated with the Church of England in South Africa, and Kalangula was ordained a priest in the CESA in 1979.
In 1973 he was nominated to the Owambo Legislative Council. He was a member of the Owambo delegation to the Turnhalle Constitutional Conference 1975-1977, and joined the Democratic Turnhalle Alliance (DTA) as a member of the National Democratic Party (NDP), and was a member of the DTA head committee until 1980. He participated in the 1978 elections, becoming a DTA member of the first National Assembly 1979-1983. He tried to persuade the DTA to form a single party, and when it failed to do so he left to form Christian Democratic Action for Social Justice (CDA).
[edit] Bibliography
- Pütz, Joachim, von Egidy, Heidi & Caplan, Perri (1990). Namibia handbook and political who's who. Windhoek: Magus. ISBN 0-620-14172-7.