アルバート・ルトゥーリ
EII-D "Empath" Politician & Human Rights Activist · South Africa · 20cSouth African politician and human rights activist (1898–1967). As President of the ANC he led non-violent resistance to apartheid and received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1960. First African Nobel Peace laureate. Confined to his farm for years by the government's banning orders.
Leading Function+Fi-p (Morality & Duty)
"I do not hate white people" — the words showing the deep reflection on personal moral responsibility that is the core of +Fi-p action. Non-violent commitment as ANC President.
Creative Function-Ne-c (Common Sense & Peace)
"I do not hate white people" — practising non-hatred with the weapon of common sense. Using non-violence as a weapon of common sense for 30 years even after Mandela chose armed struggle — the core of -Ne-c creative function.
Vulnerable Function 1+Se-p weak (Achievement & Protection)
Records of +Se-p weak: power, social influence, and coercive action. Concentration on inner sincerity reduced outward power-seeking behaviour.
Vulnerable Function 2-Ti-c weak (System & Transformation)
Records of -Ti-c weak: logical and systematic thoroughness. Emotional compassion and intuitive care overwhelmed logical system-building.
Quadra / Temperament / Club
Quadra: Delta Quadra (Tradition) — deep trust in the spiritual value of universal human dignity. Non-violence as method; dignity for all people in South Africa.
Temperament: "Always tolerant, gentle, moderate in manner and word." Martin Luther King's assessment: "dignity of spirit and composure" — overwhelming evidence of the Balanced-Stable temperament.
Club: Humanitarian-Artistic Club activity through literature, art, and ethics. Luthuli's work functioned as the integration of artistic completeness and humanitarian mission.
Worldview & Attitude
The world is simple and inherently good (positivism). Trust in order and cooperation, dedication to a stable community as the premise of action. "Racial discrimination can be overcome through non-violence and love" — optimistic pacifism. Belief that the conscience of all human beings, including white South Africans, could eventually be reached.
Attitude toward Change: Implementing change as a realistic plan in a gradual, step-by-step manner. ANC leadership pursued through non-violent resistance and appeal to the moral conscience of the international community.
