Memorial services have been held across South Africa while an intimate night of remembrance with his close friends is taking place.
After
Saturday's funeral, Tutu's remains will be cremated and his ashes then placed
in the cathedral, where he preached for many years.
The
cathedral's bells have been ringing for 10 minutes every day at noon since his
death.Mourners have been filing past the coffin of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, as
his body lies in state at St George's Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa.
Tutu, a
Nobel Peace Prize winner who helped end apartheid in South Africa, died on
Sunday aged 90.
His
official state funeral will be held on 1 January after the lying-in-state
period, allowing mourners to file past his body and say their final goodbyes.
Large
crowds are expected to visit the cathedral over two days.
The lying
in state period had to be extended to two days, "for fear there might be a
stampede", a local priest told AFP news agency.
Priests
burnt incense as Tutu's simple wooden coffin was carried into the cathedral.
Tutu's
wish was that there be "no ostentatiousness or lavish spending" on
his funeral and he even "asked that the coffin be the cheapest
available", his foundation said.
Analyst
Lukhanyo Vangqa tweeted that the coffin's simplicity was a "powerful
rebuke" of the governing African National Congress (ANC) and its
"emergent culture of opulence and decadence".
Tutu's
eldest daughter Thandeka Tutu-Gxashe, accompanied by other family elders,
walked slowly behind as the coffin entered his former parish.
His frail
wife Leah had been wheeled into the church earlier.
A small
service was held for the family before they viewed his body.
"It's
a painful moment for Mama Leah. She is in bereavement. We need to pray for her.
We need to love her and continue supporting her even though her beloved husband
is gone," Archbishop Thabo Makgoba said.
Members of
the public have been paying their respects to the much-revered churchman, a
driving force in the struggle to abolish the apartheid system enforced by the
white-minority government against the black majority in South Africa from the
late 1940s until the early 1990s.
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