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Joost de Blank

Joost de Blank
Archbishop of Cape Town
Joost de Blank
Church Anglican
Province Southern Africa
Metropolis Cape Town
In office 1957–1963
Predecessor Geoffrey Clayton
Successor Robert Selby Taylor
Other posts Bishop of Stepney (1952–1957)
Orders
Ordination 1932
Consecration 1952
Personal details
Born (1908-11-14)14 November 1908
Rotterdam, South Holland, Netherlands
Died 1 January 1968(1968-01-01) (aged 59)
City of Westminster, Greater London, United Kingdom
Buried Westminster Abbey
Nationality Dutch/British
Education Merchant Taylors' School
Alma mater Queens' College, Cambridge
King's College London
Ridley Hall, Cambridge

Joost de Blank (14 November 1908 – 1 January 1968) was the Archbishop of Cape Town, South Africa from 1957 to 1963 and was known as the "scourge of apartheid" for his ardent opposition to the whites-only policies of the South African government.

De Blank was born in Rotterdam on 14 November 1908, he became a British subject as a child in 1921. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, King's College London, and Queens' College, Cambridge.

He was ordained after a period of study at Ridley Hall, Cambridge in 1932 and began his career as a Curate in Bath. De Blank held incumbencies at Forest Gate and Greenhill, Harrow. During World War II he was an army chaplain.

In 1952 he was appointed the Bishop of Stepney in the Diocese of London and continued in this post until he was translated to Cape Town.

During this bishopric, de Blank, visited Ruth Ellis in prison just before she was hanged, for the murder of David Blakeley in 1955, when she told him, "It is quite clear to me that I was not the person who shot him. When I saw myself with the revolver I knew I was another person." These comments were quoted in a London evening paper of the time, The Star.

He succeeded Geoffrey Clayton as Archbishop of Cape Town in 1957. In South Africa, he refused to preach in any church not open to blacks as well as whites. He opposed clause 29 of Natives Law Amendment Bill, which gave the civil authorities powers to exclude non whites from Anglican churches. In 1960 De Blank called on the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) to repudiate apartheid, and in the same year criticised the South African jubilee celebrations: "This is no time for rejoicing, but for shame".


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