From: Lambeth Palace <contact@lambethpalace.org.uk>Subject: 60053 Your letter to the Archbishop of CanterburyDate: 12 December 2019 at 13:21:26 CETTo: “diana.johnstone@wanadoo.fr”, “mnm@nachdenkseiten.de”Dear Ms Johnstone and Mr Müller,Thank you for your recent letter addressed to the Archbishop of Canterbury, for and on behalf of your other signatories. Much as he would like to, the Archbishop is unable to respond personally and in detail to all the emails and letters that he receives, so I have been asked to reply to you on his behalf.Thank you for taking the time to share your concerns in this matter, which have been noted. Archbishop Justin is often asked to make statements on a wide range of issues and many people write asking him to intervene in domestic and international matters.Letters like your own just go to show that people are seeking to respond to the current uncertainties which is a constant encouragement to Archbishop Justin. He is grateful to you for writing and hopes that you will understand that it must be for him to decide when and about what subjects he raises in public. For him not to speak out about an issue does not necessarily mean that it is not of concern to him, but the context and opportunity must be right if any intervention is to be effective.Nevertheless, thank you again for taking the time to write.Yours sincerely,Dominic Goodall
Dear Mr Goodall,Thank you for your reply to our recent letter[1] concerning Julian Assange. From your opening paragraph we assume that Archbishop Welby has read our letter, and we are passing your response on to the signatories of our letter.Dear Archbishop Justin Welby,The time to speak out about the treatment of Julian Assange by the British and the US Authorities seems quite urgently to be now. His health is deteriorating, as outlined in a recent open letter by 60 medical Doctors.[2] On Friday 13 December, there was another technical hearing of the case, where it transpired that Julian Assange has not even been able to read key evidence against him in the case that has been prepared against him by the US for nearly ten years. His court hearing is in just over two months. Such treatment goes contrary to the tradition of English rights initiated by the Magna Carta over 800 years ago.Moreover, the result of the recent general election means that there will be a government with a huge majority including numerous Members who have publicly prejudiced Mr. Assange. There is no mercy to be expected from political authorities. This situation increases the urgency of calling on you to act as a higher moral authority. We ask you to share these thoughts with Her Majesty Queen Elisabeth II.It takes a high degree of courage to go against the mood of one’s own milieu. But those who dare speak out in favour of the victim of a lynch mob gain a place of honour in history. When the writer Emile Zola spoke out in defence of Captain Dreyfus, he was forced to seek asylum in London, but a century later his example is remembered as a shining beacon in the whole affair. You have shown that you are not shy to speak up on current affairs, when you spoke out on behalf of Britain’s Jews.We are writing these lines from human beings to human beings on behalf of another human being in dire distress.Whatever mistakes he may have made, like any human being, Julian Assange is fervently admired worldwide for his courageous commitment to speaking truth. His life is at stake, and also at stake is the United Kingdom’s reputation as land of respect for individual rights and freedoms. The world watches and cares.History will take note of what is done now.Yours sincerely,Moritz Müller, Skibbereen, Republic of Ireland. mnm@nachdenkseiten.deDiana Johnstone, Paris, France. diana.johnstone@wanadoo.frNotes[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88Kzf9ivQSQ&feature=youtu.be[2] https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/nov/25/julian-assanges-health-is-so-bad-he-could-die-in-prison-say-60-doctors
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
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