Letters Editor,
Sunday Telegraph,
1 Canada Square
Canary Wharf
London E14 5DT
28th December 2003
Dear Sir,
Your criticisms (‘An Unworthy Bishop’, Sunday Telegraph, 28th December
2003)
of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, were misplaced,
uninformed and ill-mannered. You seem to think that spiritual guidance
should not relate to matters of this world.
In warning of the dangers of the credit explosion, the Archbishop was
reminding us of a longstanding biblical lesson that debt should be avoided
as far as possible. In the monotheistic faiths, usury has always been
forbidden as its practice seeks to exploit the misfortunes of others by
piling on even more debt on their shoulders. Today’s widespread charging
of
usury is hardly a formula for greater social cohesion and is clearly
exploitative. The Chief Executive of Barclays Bank, Matt Barrett, recently
admitted as much, when he revealed that he had advised his own four
children
to steer well clear of credit cards.
You question the Archbishop’s concern for the hundreds of Muslims who are
being held without trial at Guantanamo Bay saying that, “does Dr Williams
really suggest that humanity would better be served by refusing to
imprison
those who, given the chance, would delight in making a nuclear attack on a
Western city?” Yet, these men, many of whom have now been caged and denied
their liberty for over two years now, have not been charged with any
crime,
let alone convicted of planning nuclear attacks. Does the Sunday Telegraph
believe that the due process of law should be afforded to all, except
Muslims?
Finally, you ridicule the Archbishop’s recent pronouncements as having
‘echoed Edward Lear rather than Alfred Lord Tennyson’. One would have
expected a little more humility from a paper which ran a front page splash
on 23rd March 2003 confidently informing its readers that Saddam Hussein
had
been so badly injured in a US Air Strike that he had needed blood
transfusions.
Yours faithfully,
Mr Inayat Bunglawala,
Secretary,
Media Committee,
The Muslim Council of Britain