Pillay was one of two candidates standing for election to the WCC's highest administrative post. The other was Dr Elizabeth Joy, the first woman to be shortlisted as a candidate for general secretary in the WCC’s history. When Pillay studied at university in the 1970s, the institutions were segregated for undergraduates, and as an Indian South African, he attended the University of Durban Westville. Later, he got a PhD from Rhodes University, which had been for whites. One journalist asked Pillay about Moscow’s Patriarch Kirill "supporting Russia's brutal war of aggression" in Ukraine and if it could result in the Russian Orthodox Church being suspended from the WCC. "The WCC would advocate dialogue, conversations, bringing people across the table and asking, what is it that prompts and inspires as well?" said Pillay. "We need the Patriarch; we need the Russian Orthodox Church with us in these conversations; we can't have them without them. So, suspension is not on the cards at the moment, especially if we advocated things like dialogue." Deeper understanding Pillay said that is the way to get a "deeper understanding and appreciation of the issues and be able to make more calculated decisions based on incisive wisdom." Pillay was asked about his origins in South Africa and said he was born and bred as a South African Indian - of Indian descent, "but I have had no connections whatsoever with India, My great-great grandfather, probably five generations ago, came to South Africa. "I have visited India many times; I've tried to look at some of these connections…But for myself, I'm really of South African descent, as an Indian." Asked about the South Africa of Demond Tutu and Gandhi, Pillay said one of the things about South Africa specifically that kept them sane in the midst of the insanity of apartheid "was our spirituality." "In those dark days of apartheid, I would go into the (black) townships, and I would be so deeply inspired, and yet even sometimes troubled by the fact that I would see people laughing and praying and rejoicing and dancing on the streets. And I would ask myself, how in the world can you do this in the midst of suffering? And then I realized very quickly the spirituality in that suffering." Dr Agnes Abuom, moderator of the WCC central committee and Bishop Mary Ann Swenson, the vice moderator, also spoke to the journalists. Swenson said a new central committee would be elected at the WCC 11th Assembly. Video recording of the press conference with the general secretary-elect Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay elected as new WCC general secretary (WCC press release, 17 June 2022) Press photos of the WCC general secretary-elect WCC Central committee meeting, June 2022 |
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