Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby apologises for abuse at Church of England camps

UNITED KINGDOM
International Business Times

By Josh Robbins
February 2, 2017

The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby apologised on Wednesday evening (1 February 2017) to men who were allegedly abused and ceremonially beaten by John Smyth at a Christian holiday camp where Welby was dormitory officer in the 1970s.

Welby admitted that the Church of England had “failed terribly” when it did not contact police following an internal report into Smyth’s activities. Smyth had been chairman of the Irwene Trust, a charity that ran Bible camps for public school boys.

He lived in Winchester, where he is said to have developed a cult-like following in the 1970s and 80s. It is alleged that he would take boys into his shed, recite passages from the Bible and then beat them with a cane to make them “become holy”.

Some youths reported bleeding so severely that they were forced to wear adult nappies. The claims are to be aired by Channel 4 in the UK on Thursday evening (2 February) and were reported by The Times.

A Lambeth Palace statement said that the archbishop “was not part of the inner circle of friends; no one discussed allegations of abuse by John Smyth with him” and that the two did not stay in touch when Smyth moved abroad “apart from the occasional card”.

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