Trevor huddleston desmond tutu

          Father Trevor Huddleston doffed his hat to greet his mother.

        1. Father Trevor Huddleston doffed his hat to greet his mother.
        2. The man was an Anglican priest called Trevor Huddleston who was bitterly opposed to apartheid.
        3. Several times a week, a young white Anglican priest named Trevor Huddleston would leave his bicycle behind the hospital and would then walk.
        4. Trevor Huddleston, of the Community of the Resurrection in Mirfield.
        5. During an interview with Sir David Frost, Archbishop Desmond Tutu describes his meeting wiht Father Tervor Huddleston and the influence he.
        6. Several times a week, a young white Anglican priest named Trevor Huddleston would leave his bicycle behind the hospital and would then walk....

          Trevor Huddleston

          British Anglican priest (1913–1998)

          For the American stock car racing driver, see Trevor Huddleston (racing driver).

          Ernest Urban Trevor HuddlestonCR KCMG (15 June 1913 – 20 April 1998) was an English Anglicanbishop.

          He was the Bishop of Stepney in London before becoming the second Archbishop of the Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean. He was best known for his anti-apartheid activism and his book Naught for Your Comfort.

          Early life

          Huddleston was the son of Ernest Huddleston and was born in Bedford, Bedfordshire, and educated at Lancing College (1927–1931),[1]Christ Church, Oxford, and at Wells Theological College.

          He joined an Anglican religious order, the Community of the Resurrection (CR), in 1939, taking vows in 1941,[2] having already served for three years as a curate at St Mark's Swindon.[2] He had been made a deacon at Michaelmas 1936 (27 September)[3] and ordained a pries