David Russell (bishop)

The Rt Revd
David Patrick Hamilton Russell
Bishop of Grahamstown
Church Anglican
Diocese Grahamstown
In office 1987 – 2004
Predecessor Kenneth Oram
Successor Thabo Makgoba
Orders
Ordination 1965
Consecration 1986
Personal details
Born November 6, 1938
Died August 17, 2014 (aged 75)
Cape Town

The Rt Rev David Patrick Hamilton Russell (6 November 1938–17 August 2014) was a South African Anglican bishop.[1]

Life and ministry

Russell was educated at the University of Cape Town.[2] Ordained in 1965,[3] he was a chaplain to migrant workers.[4] From 1975 to 1986 he was banned and house arrested by the South African Apartheid Government.[5][6]

He was a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of St John's (now the Diocese of Mthatha) from 1986 to 1987 and then Bishop of Grahamstown until 2004.[7]

Having been born in the late 1930s, Bishop David Russell got immersed in the struggle against apartheid from an early age. He did his first degree at the University of Cape Town, and then studied for an MA at Oxford University. He did his training for the priesthood at the College of the Resurrection, Mirfield, England. He later obtained his PhD in Religious Studies (specialising in Christian Ethics) from the University of Cape Town.[8]

Anti-apartheid activism

A lifelong activist, Bishop Russell, who died on August 17, 2014 after a long battle with cancer, was a friend of Steve Biko and many others fighting apartheid. His support assisted the Black Consciousness Movement in carrying out a number of projects, particularly those facilitated by the Black Community Programmes.

Among Russell’s many acts of defiance was when on August 8, 1977 he laid down in front of trucks and bulldozers to protest against forced removals from Modderdam in the Western Cape, an area declared “whites only”. He was forcibly dragged by police and arrested as an “enemy of the state”. The apartheid regime served him with a five-year banning order on October 1977 restricting him to Cape Town.

Defying these banning orders, and found in possession of a book – Biko – by Donald Woods, he was sentenced in 1980 to a one year jail sentence. He denounced apartheid injustices and the arrests of anti-apartheid activists as vicious and pointed out that such kind of injustices filled people with “revulsion, bitterness and anger”.

Later in life, Bishop Russell was a founding member of the Steve Biko Foundation’s Board of Trustees and served in this role from 1998 - 2009. In recognition of his contribution to the liberation struggle and ongoing pursuit of social justice, Russell was nominated for a national order by the Foundation, and subsequently conferred with the Order of Baobab in Silver by President Jacob Zuma.

Bishop Russell contributed enormously to the South African liberation struggle and development at large. He will always be remembered for his role in fighting apartheid, and the memory of his contributions will continue to inspire coming generations Bishop Russell was an ardent advocate of human rights and his concern for the rights of women was an important aspect of his ministry. Even in retirement he remained an outspoken advocate for inclusivity. He was a staunch advocate for social justice and stood firmly on the side of the oppressed.

Awards

On 27 April 2011, the President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma conferred the Order of the Baobab in Silver on Russell for his outstanding contribution to the theological field.[9]

Notes

  1. Anglican Church of Southern Africa
  2. Who's Who 2008: London, A & C Black, 2008 ISBN 978-0-7136-8555-8
  3. Crockford's Clerical Directory1975-76 Lambeth Church House 1975 ISBN 0-19-200008-X
  4. MISSION 1973.
  5. Argus 17 April 1980.
  6. Russell 1980.
  7. Gould & Eve 2011, p. A:24.
  8. The Presidency SA "David Patrick Russell" Retrieved on 19 November 2014
  9. Anon. "David Patrick Russell". South African History Online. Retrieved 2014-08-26.

References

  • Hallelujah (MP3). Church hymn with Marimba and drum accompaniment sung during consecration of David Patrick Hamilton Russell (ILAM Digital Archive). Retrieved 2014-09-03.

External links

Anglican Church of Southern Africa titles
Preceded by
Kenneth Oram
Bishop of Grahamstown
1987 2004
Succeeded by
Thabo Makgoba