Dailymaverick logo

Maverick News

Maverick News

Sexual abuse scandal - John Smyth, Jeremy Gauntlett and the shame of the Anglican Church

The worst known abuse scandal in the Anglican Church’s history arrived squarely on South African shores. Evidence suggests they may have messed it up - twice over.
Sexual abuse scandal - John Smyth, Jeremy Gauntlett and the shame of the Anglican Church

Warning: This story contains explicit references to the sexual assault of minors.

Brick Court Chambers is rated as the second most prestigious barristers’ chambers in London. South African advocate Jeremy Gauntlett called it his professional home in the UK, with his profile on the chambers’ website describing him as “among the top counsel in the city”. Now his profile has been quietly removed, while a media inquiry to Brick Court Chambers this week went unanswered. Gauntlett’s career as one of the most high-flying international lawyers South Africa has ever known is over.  The 74 year-old advocate announced in a letter sent to the country’s leading legal bodies in late January that he had “for some time been planning to retire from practice after what has been a long and fulfilling legal career”, and that he would be doing so immediately.  What has ended Gauntlett’s career is a credible account of teen grooming and sexual abuse made public by a respected Wits academic.  Daily Maverick has seen an email sent by Gauntlett in 2022 in which he acknowledged the validity of this account. Gauntlett did not respond to emailed questions this week. But that’s only one part of a much wider and extraordinarily dark story: one which begins in the UK in the 1970s, ends up taking down one of the most powerful religious figures in the world, and now poses uncomfortable questions for Archbishop of Cape Town Thabo Makgoba.

John Smyth’s abhorrent double life

“He cut a striking figure as he strode through the Royal Courts of Justice in his full-bodied wig and flowing silk gown. He was one of the youngest and most brilliant QCs working in London. His sharp mind and self-assured manner meant that he was repeatedly engaged for high profile trials.” This description would in some ways be curiously appropriate for Jeremy Gauntlett, who also became a QC (Queen’s Counsel: a British lawyer of the highest rank), albeit at an older age.  But the words instead apply to John Smyth, the man described in an official investigation last year as “the most prolific serial abuser to be associated with the Church of England”. The description appears in the opening passage of British journalist Andrew Graystone’s 2021 book Bleeding for Jesus: John Smyth and the cult of the Iwerne Camps. It was Graystone who was responsible in large part for the public exposing of the Smyth scandal. [caption id="attachment_2566312" align="alignnone" width="1855"] John Smyth. (Photo: Channel 4 News / Wikipedia)[/caption] By the 1970s John Smyth was a well-known figure in the UK: a charismatic and prominent lawyer by profession. He used much of the rest of his time to groom teenage boys, using Christianity as his cover.  Smyth would have his victims enter a shed he used specifically for the purpose. There he would strip them naked and savagely beat them with a cane, while demanding that they prayed out loud. While he beat them, he would often groan with ecstasy. The beatings would last sometimes hundreds of lashes. When he was finished, Smyth would embrace them from behind, nuzzling their back and kissing their neck. The blood would be flowing down his victims’ legs. Smyth would then apply lotion to their buttocks, and give the victims an adult nappy to wear under their clothes so the bleeding was not visible. One victim, records Graystone, had a beating that lasted 12 hours. Another eventually had to wear adult nappies around the clock, with thick black trousers to “disguise the seeping blood”. Smyth groomed only sporty and good-looking boys. “It was not the conventional sexual abuse that people might imagine; it was something more complex,” writes Graystone. The beatings were regularly scheduled to boys Smyth gave Christian ministry to, in punishment for a whole range of “sins”, but with a tremendous emphasis on masturbation, which Smyth encouraged his victims to confess about at length. One boy attempted suicide on the eve of a planned beating, unable to handle the torture any more but equally incapable of seeing a way out. Smyth’s actions became known to the Church of England relatively early on, as last year’s Makin Report - also known as the John Smyth Review - has made clear.  Although Smyth was not ordained in the church, Graystone’s book and the official investigation have established that he spent his time in the UK as a high-profile member of an Anglican parish church where he counselled young men; he was trained and licensed as a lay reader in the Diocese of Winchester; and carried out much of his abuse at the Iwerne holiday camps which were set up to train attendees - including the future Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby - to be leaders in the Church of England. His sin, in other words, was the Church of England’s sin. By the end of 1982, writes Graystone, at least 27 adults in the UK had a “clear-sighted view of what John Smyth was doing”. Smyth had to be shipped out of the UK. The knowledge that he would almost certainly continue his abuse wherever he landed up seems to have been less of a concern than the reputational liability he posed to the church while in the UK. And so, with the encouragement and financial support of church figures and rich barrister colleagues, Smyth headed off to southern Africa: first Zimbabwe, and then South Africa. In Zimbabwe, where Smyth spent around 16 years, he would go on to abuse an estimated 90 boys. In South Africa, where Smyth spent the final 17 years of his life: we still don’t know. 

Zimbabwe abuse includes one mysterious teen death

There are very few heroes in the Smyth story, but one of them is yet another lawyer: Zimbabwean David Coltart.  It was Coltart, the current Mayor of Bulawayo, who launched what was at that stage by far the most extensive investigation into Smyth - based on disturbing accounts about what Smyth had been up to since arriving in Harare in 1985. Smyth had launched Christian camps for Zimbabwean schoolboys where nudity was compulsory in many contexts, and Smyth would shower and sleep in the boys’ area, rather than the adults’. The beatings, of course, continued. Graystone reported, based on interviews with victims, that Smyth would be “breathing heavily” while he carried out the beatings, and that there was “no doubt that Smyth was emotionally and sexually aroused”. One boy told Graystone that the beatings were “the first time I realised that black skin could bruise”. Another Zimbabwean victim recounted to Graystone how “Smyth would call him to his office, stroke his hair and body and tell him he was a good boy. ‘You’re such a good boy that I want to give you a present,’ he would say. The present was sharing a bed with him”. The tipping point for Smyth’s Zimbabwean sojourn seems to have been the death of a 16 year-old boy at one of his camps, Guide Nyachuru, under mysterious circumstances. (The former Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, wrote relatively recently to the Nyachuru family to offer his condolences.) Coltart contacted a well-known Zimbabwean psychologist, Margaret Henning, and presented her with affidavits he had collected about Smyth’s behaviour. “[Henning] was the first to describe Smyth’s behaviour as sadism, to state clearly that it was motivated by sex, and to note the common characteristics with a cult,” Graystone writes. Coltart compiled his findings into a 21-page report in 1993. He sent it on to boys’ boarding schools in Zimbabwe and leading private schools in South Africa. Coltart confirmed to Daily Maverick this week that he also sent the report to the Anglican Church in Zimbabwe. A criminal prosecution was attempted, but it collapsed. Feeling the heat in Zimbabwe, Smyth and his wife Anne packed up shop hurriedly in 2001. Their new destination: Umdloti, KwaZulu-Natal.

Kelvin Grove squash, showers and sex talk sessions

We know frighteningly little about Smyth’s activities in South Africa - except the part of his life that he carried out in full public view. His background as a prominent London barrister enabled him to rebrand as an outspoken legal commentator advocating for conservative Christian values in South Africa’s democratic laws. Smyth would eventually be seen on SABC as a talking head opining about the Oscar Pistorius trial in 2014. Soon after arrival, Smyth was elected head of the Christian Lawyers’ Association of South Africa. He worked closely with the organisation Doctors for Life to challenge abortion laws. Graystone writes that he gave occasional lectures at the University of the Free State; one, in 2008, saw Smyth tell students that homosexuality is “almost always caught, not inherited”, sometimes from “some older man or woman”. He also began work on his passion project, the Justice Alliance of South Africa, which was involved in some significant Constitutional litigation against the government. One 2011 case brought by Smyth’s group, involving term limits for the Chief Justice, saw Jeremy Gauntlett represent one of the amicus curiae (friends of the court) in the matter.  By 2005 the Smyths had moved to Cape Town and settled in Bergvliet, worshipping at St Martin’s Anglican Church in Bergvliet.  St Martin’s did not respond to Daily Maverick’s inquiries this week. But the Reverend David Beyer, who led the church at the time, previously told ITN: “He just passed a remark that he had some youngsters who came to his home, and that they had ministry time together, and I said ‘Well, well done, because I’m sure you’ll do it very well’.” The Smyths left St Martin’s suddenly after a few years, for reasons which are not clear, and moved to a southern suburbs church popular with young people: Church-on-Main. There, pastor Andrew Thomson told Daily Maverick this week, Smyth’s charm, erudition and seemingly distinguished British background opened doors for him to enter church leadership. “This is a senior guy, he’s been in the church for a long time, he’s a barrister…” Thomson remembers the attitude of the time being. It was only in 2016 that Thomson began to get an inkling of what they were dealing with. “In that time period, a young guy came to us and said they weren’t happy with John Smyth. He had this practice where he would meet people at Kelvin Grove [members’ club] and they would play squash together, shower in open showers, go for breakfast and he would talk to the young guys about sexuality”. Thomson notes that Smyth was not just active within his own church. “His ministry range wasn’t only at Church-on-Main. He ministered at a couple of other churches around, and he ran a Bible study of his own at home.” Thomson and the church leadership team decided to suspend Smyth and his wife from church leadership, in response to which he said Smyth became “obstreperous”. Says Thomson: “It was awkward. This was a man who was many years senior to any of us. But in dealing with him, we realised there’s a serious problem here.” In February 2017, the skeletons came tumbling out of Smyth’s closet. Channel 4 News in the UK aired an expose on Smyth’s abuse, produced with Graystone’s research, which shocked the country and sent the Church of England into its biggest crisis in decades.  It was front page news for all the British papers. One of Thomson’s congregants happened to be flying back to Cape Town that day, and brought him a newspaper.   “We went to John and advised him to fly to the UK, ask for a legal officer of the Anglican church to represent you, and hand yourself over,” says Thomson. “We even offered to pay for his tickets. He was adamant that was the worst idea: he would sit it out in South Africa.” Smyth and his wife were excommunicated from Church-on-Main. Yet they were permitted back, even after the international headlines, to worship at the Anglican St Martin’s - on condition that Smyth had no contact with minors. John Smyth died in Cape Town on 11 August 2018, 8 days after being told he needed to submit himself to questioning from UK police or face extradition. Suicide? “I don’t put it out of the question,” says Thomson.

What did Archbishop Makgoba know? 

The Smyth scandal would ultimately cost the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, his job - due to the evidence that Church of England leaders had first heard of Smyth’s abuse more than four decades ago, and yet failed to take meaningful action. But serious questions have yet to be asked of Welby’s counterpart and friend in South Africa, Archbishop Thabo Makgoba, about what the local church knew - and when. There are already inconsistencies between what Makgoba has said about the case and what journalists have been told.  In a November statement, for instance, Makgoba seemingly sought to allay concerns about Smyth’s time in South Africa by stating that “St Martin’s reported that Smyth neither counselled young people, nor were any allegations of abuse or grooming made against Smyth by any member”.  Yet in the interview given to ITN in 2017 referenced above, Reverend David Beyer of St Martin’s told the journalist that Smyth “had some youngsters who came to his home, and they had ministry time together”. The Makin Report states that South African church authorities were informed about Smyth, his home address and email address in an email from the Bishop of Ely in the UK in 2013 - and yet heard nothing back, despite multiple attempts to follow up.  Graystone writes that if the Diocese of Cape Town had conducted a basic Google search after receiving this email, “they would have realised that Smyth was leading a prominent Christian organisation based in Cape Town. They would have seen him engaging with the South African government on multiple levels, and appearing regularly as a Christian spokesperson on local and national television.”  Archbishop Makgoba himself said in a statement last November that he first became aware of the Smyth saga “in 2017, when Channel Four in the UK broadcast an expose of Smyth’s abuse”. Yet the Makin Report details an “acknowledgment from Bishop of Cape Town having received letter [about Smyth] from Bishop of Ely” on 9 August 2013. Former Archbishop of Canterbury Welby also claimed in a live TV interview with Channel 4 in April 2019 that he personally had written to the Archbishop of Cape Town in 2013. In response to questions on this from Daily Maverick this week, Archbishop Makgoba replied: “The matter is the subject of the inquiry panel’s investigation”. Which brings us to the matter of the review panel looking into the handling of John Smyth by the church in South Africa.  

Anglican Church “marking its own homework”?

The Makin Report concluded that a separate review needed to be undertaken into John Smyth’s activities in South Africa and the handling of the scandal by the relevant local church authorities. “It is highly likely that he was continuing to abuse young men [in South Africa] and there is some evidence to this effect,” the report found. “There are some records of him returning to the UK, but these visits do not appear to be for fundraising. How John Smyth funded his quite opulent lifestyle, living in a large house in a quiet suburb of Cape Town, is not known.” When the report was released in November last year, Makgoba accordingly announced a panel to “review my and the church’s past actions in relation to the John Smyth abuse scandal”.   Makgoba had assembled a panel seemingly beyond reproach: Dr Mamphela Ramphela, Judge Ian Farlam - and Advocate Jeremy Gauntlett.  “Three prominent South Africans experienced in human rights issues,” as Makgoba termed them. Perhaps it didn’t hurt that two of the three already held church posts. Gauntlett, at the time of the panel’s announcement, was the Chancellor of the Anglican Diocese of Cape Town, and Farlam was the Chancellor of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa. These are not paid posts, Makgoba told Daily Maverick this week; chancellors “give advice on the implementation of canon law and perform functions such as advising a court for the trial of a bishop”. Makgoba denied that appointing two people who already held church posts to a review of the church’s actions could amount to a conflict of interests, because Farlam and Gauntlett “are not involved in safeguarding matters”. Not everyone agrees.  Graystone, who as a result of his years-long work on the Smyth case has become well-versed in church protocol, told Daily Maverick: “If Makgoba wanted to demonstrate that the church was subjecting itself to external scrutiny, in this case over Smyth, you would have thought he would choose people who aren’t already part of the system.”  Added Graystone: “It smacks of the church marking its own homework”.

Gauntlett faces accusations of predatory past

Not a lot of media attention was paid to the announcement of the review panel - until Wits anthropology academic Hylton White went public with his sexual abuse allegations against Gauntlett after realising with horror that Gauntlett would be one of those reviewing the handling of Smyth. White has recounted in a public Facebook post, now well-publicised, how he met Gauntlett when he was in his early teens and Gauntlett in his mid-30s, in the 1980s.  “In my early teens I went up the Hogsback peak with him,” White wrote. “At a pool halfway up the mountain he undressed me and gripped me between his own naked legs in the water. What he did behind me I can’t say.” White went on to describe additional grooming by Gauntlett, and incidents including a visit to Gauntlett’s hotel room in Port Elizabeth “where he had me undress so he could bathe me then have sex with me”. Later on, in Cape Town, White “swam naked with him in his pool at his Constantia home, was groped by him while his wife was a room away, then finally threw him out of my residence room at campus when he dropped me off one day”. White has stressed that he “consented to all these acts insofar as consent meant anything at that time in my life”. The academic confronted Gauntlett about the abuse over email in 2022, when White was 52 and Gauntlett 72, and received an apology from Gauntlett seen by Daily Maverick. Gauntlett told White, as per White’s Facebook post, that there were “no others”. Multiple legal insiders, speaking on condition of anonymity because Gauntlett is still judged an intimidating and powerful individual, have told Daily Maverick that rumours about Gauntlett demonstrating inappropriate behaviour towards younger men have swirled for years. Gauntlett did not respond to Daily Maverick’s emailed questions this week. There are, however, no additional accusations of underage abuse and no known official complaints. White this week declined to comment further to Daily Maverick as he felt his version of events had already been aired sufficiently. White added only that he had been disappointed by homophobic and otherwise divisive commentary on social media since the story broke, having had several completely consensual sexual relationships with male peers in his youth. “I have been very grateful for how these and other queer friends have stepped up for me and my family during this time,” White said. He added that child sexual exploitation should be treated as child sexual exploitation and not conflated with prejudices around race and sexual orientation.      

Did the Church once again ignore a warning about an abuser?

What prompted White to go public with his story was his frustration with the fact that a mutual friend, Anna-Maria Makhulu, had emailed Archbishop Makgoba to warn him about Gauntlett’s past with regards to the Smyth inquiry on 9 January - and did not receive a response, an out-of-office reply, or an email bounceback. Makgoba subsequently told News24 that this was due to the church’s poor quality “internal communication during the holiday period”. This week, the Archbishop told Daily Maverick that the explanation behind his non-response to the Makhulu email should not be released because he had already given it to White and Makhulu, and “it is critical to our safeguarding process that survivors of abuse should know that their interactions with the church are kept confidential”. The additional complication, however, is that Makhulu also sent her complaint regarding Gauntlett on 9 January to Smyth panel member Mamphela Ramphele.  Whether Ramphele took any action is unknown; Ramphele has since referred all questions on the matter to the church. Makgoba told Daily Maverick that when it came to the question of whether Ramphele attempted to alert anyone to the Gauntlett complaint, “I will consider addressing the matter after the [Smyth] panel has reported”. Ramphele was one of scores of high-profile South Africans, including Democratic Alliance federal chair Helen Zille, who previously nominated Gauntlett for a position on the Bench of the Constitutional Court.  Makgoba released a statement on the White matter on 18 January, in which he said with regards to White’s Gauntlett account: “No complaint is known to have been made to Safe Church [the Anglican church safeguarding body] or to the church itself on this matter over the past 40 years”. It was a strange comment, since there was never any suggestion from White that Gauntlett’s abuse took place in any context involving the Anglican church. Makgoba said that he had accepted Gauntlett’s resignation from the Smyth panel on the grounds of “the well-recognised principle in the law that even the appearance of a conflict of interest can be enough to trigger a recusal from a matter”. Gauntlett has not made any public statement on the matter, beyond his letter to legal bodies explaining that he was resigning due to “a blitz of media reports concerning my private life” which had become “intolerable for me and for my family”. The work of the Smyth panel will continue from Farlam and Mamphele. Asked by Daily Maverick if it might not be preferable to reconstitute the panel in its entirety, Makgoba replied: “Between [Farlam and Ramphele’s] reputations for the impartial administration of justice and commitment to telling truth to power, I am confident in the integrity of the remaining members of the panel and that their report will reflect this”. DM  Rebecca Davis can be reached on rebecca@dailymaverick.co.za Daily Maverick's anonymous tip-off line can be accessed via this link.

Warning: This story contains explicit references to the sexual assault of minors.


Brick Court Chambers is rated as the second most prestigious barristers’ chambers in London. South African advocate Jeremy Gauntlett called it his professional home in the UK, with his profile on the chambers’ website describing him as “among the top counsel in the city”.

Now his profile has been quietly removed, while a media inquiry to Brick Court Chambers this week went unanswered. Gauntlett’s career as one of the most high-flying international lawyers South Africa has ever known is over. 

The 74 year-old advocate announced in a letter sent to the country’s leading legal bodies in late January that he had “for some time been planning to retire from practice after what has been a long and fulfilling legal career”, and that he would be doing so immediately. 

What has ended Gauntlett’s career is a credible account of teen grooming and sexual abuse made public by a respected Wits academic. 

Daily Maverick has seen an email sent by Gauntlett in 2022 in which he acknowledged the validity of this account. Gauntlett did not respond to emailed questions this week.

But that’s only one part of a much wider and extraordinarily dark story: one which begins in the UK in the 1970s, ends up taking down one of the most powerful religious figures in the world, and now poses uncomfortable questions for Archbishop of Cape Town Thabo Makgoba.

John Smyth’s abhorrent double life


“He cut a striking figure as he strode through the Royal Courts of Justice in his full-bodied wig and flowing silk gown. He was one of the youngest and most brilliant QCs working in London. His sharp mind and self-assured manner meant that he was repeatedly engaged for high profile trials.”

This description would in some ways be curiously appropriate for Jeremy Gauntlett, who also became a QC (Queen’s Counsel: a British lawyer of the highest rank), albeit at an older age. 

But the words instead apply to John Smyth, the man described in an official investigation last year as “the most prolific serial abuser to be associated with the Church of England”.

The description appears in the opening passage of British journalist Andrew Graystone’s 2021 book Bleeding for Jesus: John Smyth and the cult of the Iwerne Camps. It was Graystone who was responsible in large part for the public exposing of the Smyth scandal.

John Smyth. (Photo: Channel 4 News / Wikipedia)



By the 1970s John Smyth was a well-known figure in the UK: a charismatic and prominent lawyer by profession. He used much of the rest of his time to groom teenage boys, using Christianity as his cover. 

Smyth would have his victims enter a shed he used specifically for the purpose. There he would strip them naked and savagely beat them with a cane, while demanding that they prayed out loud. While he beat them, he would often groan with ecstasy. The beatings would last sometimes hundreds of lashes.

When he was finished, Smyth would embrace them from behind, nuzzling their back and kissing their neck. The blood would be flowing down his victims’ legs. Smyth would then apply lotion to their buttocks, and give the victims an adult nappy to wear under their clothes so the bleeding was not visible.

One victim, records Graystone, had a beating that lasted 12 hours. Another eventually had to wear adult nappies around the clock, with thick black trousers to “disguise the seeping blood”.

Smyth groomed only sporty and good-looking boys.

“It was not the conventional sexual abuse that people might imagine; it was something more complex,” writes Graystone.

The beatings were regularly scheduled to boys Smyth gave Christian ministry to, in punishment for a whole range of “sins”, but with a tremendous emphasis on masturbation, which Smyth encouraged his victims to confess about at length. One boy attempted suicide on the eve of a planned beating, unable to handle the torture any more but equally incapable of seeing a way out.

Smyth’s actions became known to the Church of England relatively early on, as last year’s Makin Report - also known as the John Smyth Review - has made clear. 

Although Smyth was not ordained in the church, Graystone’s book and the official investigation have established that he spent his time in the UK as a high-profile member of an Anglican parish church where he counselled young men; he was trained and licensed as a lay reader in the Diocese of Winchester; and carried out much of his abuse at the Iwerne holiday camps which were set up to train attendees - including the future Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby - to be leaders in the Church of England.

His sin, in other words, was the Church of England’s sin.

By the end of 1982, writes Graystone, at least 27 adults in the UK had a “clear-sighted view of what John Smyth was doing”.

Smyth had to be shipped out of the UK. The knowledge that he would almost certainly continue his abuse wherever he landed up seems to have been less of a concern than the reputational liability he posed to the church while in the UK.

And so, with the encouragement and financial support of church figures and rich barrister colleagues, Smyth headed off to southern Africa: first Zimbabwe, and then South Africa.

In Zimbabwe, where Smyth spent around 16 years, he would go on to abuse an estimated 90 boys.

In South Africa, where Smyth spent the final 17 years of his life: we still don’t know. 

Zimbabwe abuse includes one mysterious teen death


There are very few heroes in the Smyth story, but one of them is yet another lawyer: Zimbabwean David Coltart. 

It was Coltart, the current Mayor of Bulawayo, who launched what was at that stage by far the most extensive investigation into Smyth - based on disturbing accounts about what Smyth had been up to since arriving in Harare in 1985.

Smyth had launched Christian camps for Zimbabwean schoolboys where nudity was compulsory in many contexts, and Smyth would shower and sleep in the boys’ area, rather than the adults’.

The beatings, of course, continued. Graystone reported, based on interviews with victims, that Smyth would be “breathing heavily” while he carried out the beatings, and that there was “no doubt that Smyth was emotionally and sexually aroused”.

One boy told Graystone that the beatings were “the first time I realised that black skin could bruise”.

Another Zimbabwean victim recounted to Graystone how “Smyth would call him to his office, stroke his hair and body and tell him he was a good boy. ‘You’re such a good boy that I want to give you a present,’ he would say. The present was sharing a bed with him”.

The tipping point for Smyth’s Zimbabwean sojourn seems to have been the death of a 16 year-old boy at one of his camps, Guide Nyachuru, under mysterious circumstances. (The former Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, wrote relatively recently to the Nyachuru family to offer his condolences.)

Coltart contacted a well-known Zimbabwean psychologist, Margaret Henning, and presented her with affidavits he had collected about Smyth’s behaviour.

“[Henning] was the first to describe Smyth’s behaviour as sadism, to state clearly that it was motivated by sex, and to note the common characteristics with a cult,” Graystone writes.

Coltart compiled his findings into a 21-page report in 1993. He sent it on to boys’ boarding schools in Zimbabwe and leading private schools in South Africa.

Coltart confirmed to Daily Maverick this week that he also sent the report to the Anglican Church in Zimbabwe.

A criminal prosecution was attempted, but it collapsed. Feeling the heat in Zimbabwe, Smyth and his wife Anne packed up shop hurriedly in 2001. Their new destination: Umdloti, KwaZulu-Natal.

Kelvin Grove squash, showers and sex talk sessions


We know frighteningly little about Smyth’s activities in South Africa - except the part of his life that he carried out in full public view.

His background as a prominent London barrister enabled him to rebrand as an outspoken legal commentator advocating for conservative Christian values in South Africa’s democratic laws. Smyth would eventually be seen on SABC as a talking head opining about the Oscar Pistorius trial in 2014.

Soon after arrival, Smyth was elected head of the Christian Lawyers’ Association of South Africa. He worked closely with the organisation Doctors for Life to challenge abortion laws. Graystone writes that he gave occasional lectures at the University of the Free State; one, in 2008, saw Smyth tell students that homosexuality is “almost always caught, not inherited”, sometimes from “some older man or woman”.

He also began work on his passion project, the Justice Alliance of South Africa, which was involved in some significant Constitutional litigation against the government.

One 2011 case brought by Smyth’s group, involving term limits for the Chief Justice, saw Jeremy Gauntlett represent one of the amicus curiae (friends of the court) in the matter. 

By 2005 the Smyths had moved to Cape Town and settled in Bergvliet, worshipping at St Martin’s Anglican Church in Bergvliet. 

St Martin’s did not respond to Daily Maverick’s inquiries this week. But the Reverend David Beyer, who led the church at the time, previously told ITN: “He just passed a remark that he had some youngsters who came to his home, and that they had ministry time together, and I said ‘Well, well done, because I’m sure you’ll do it very well’.”

The Smyths left St Martin’s suddenly after a few years, for reasons which are not clear, and moved to a southern suburbs church popular with young people: Church-on-Main.

There, pastor Andrew Thomson told Daily Maverick this week, Smyth’s charm, erudition and seemingly distinguished British background opened doors for him to enter church leadership.

“This is a senior guy, he’s been in the church for a long time, he’s a barrister…” Thomson remembers the attitude of the time being.

It was only in 2016 that Thomson began to get an inkling of what they were dealing with.

“In that time period, a young guy came to us and said they weren’t happy with John Smyth. He had this practice where he would meet people at Kelvin Grove [members’ club] and they would play squash together, shower in open showers, go for breakfast and he would talk to the young guys about sexuality”.

Thomson notes that Smyth was not just active within his own church.

“His ministry range wasn’t only at Church-on-Main. He ministered at a couple of other churches around, and he ran a Bible study of his own at home.”

Thomson and the church leadership team decided to suspend Smyth and his wife from church leadership, in response to which he said Smyth became “obstreperous”.

Says Thomson: “It was awkward. This was a man who was many years senior to any of us. But in dealing with him, we realised there’s a serious problem here.”

In February 2017, the skeletons came tumbling out of Smyth’s closet. Channel 4 News in the UK aired an expose on Smyth’s abuse, produced with Graystone’s research, which shocked the country and sent the Church of England into its biggest crisis in decades. 

It was front page news for all the British papers. One of Thomson’s congregants happened to be flying back to Cape Town that day, and brought him a newspaper.  

“We went to John and advised him to fly to the UK, ask for a legal officer of the Anglican church to represent you, and hand yourself over,” says Thomson.

“We even offered to pay for his tickets. He was adamant that was the worst idea: he would sit it out in South Africa.”

Smyth and his wife were excommunicated from Church-on-Main. Yet they were permitted back, even after the international headlines, to worship at the Anglican St Martin’s - on condition that Smyth had no contact with minors.

John Smyth died in Cape Town on 11 August 2018, 8 days after being told he needed to submit himself to questioning from UK police or face extradition.

Suicide?

“I don’t put it out of the question,” says Thomson.


What did Archbishop Makgoba know? 


The Smyth scandal would ultimately cost the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, his job - due to the evidence that Church of England leaders had first heard of Smyth’s abuse more than four decades ago, and yet failed to take meaningful action.

But serious questions have yet to be asked of Welby’s counterpart and friend in South Africa, Archbishop Thabo Makgoba, about what the local church knew - and when.

There are already inconsistencies between what Makgoba has said about the case and what journalists have been told. 

In a November statement, for instance, Makgoba seemingly sought to allay concerns about Smyth’s time in South Africa by stating that “St Martin’s reported that Smyth neither counselled young people, nor were any allegations of abuse or grooming made against Smyth by any member”. 

Yet in the interview given to ITN in 2017 referenced above, Reverend David Beyer of St Martin’s told the journalist that Smyth “had some youngsters who came to his home, and they had ministry time together”.

The Makin Report states that South African church authorities were informed about Smyth, his home address and email address in an email from the Bishop of Ely in the UK in 2013 - and yet heard nothing back, despite multiple attempts to follow up. 

Graystone writes that if the Diocese of Cape Town had conducted a basic Google search after receiving this email, “they would have realised that Smyth was leading a prominent Christian organisation based in Cape Town. They would have seen him engaging with the South African government on multiple levels, and appearing regularly as a Christian spokesperson on local and national television.” 

Archbishop Makgoba himself said in a statement last November that he first became aware of the Smyth saga “in 2017, when Channel Four in the UK broadcast an expose of Smyth’s abuse”.

Yet the Makin Report details an “acknowledgment from Bishop of Cape Town having received letter [about Smyth] from Bishop of Ely” on 9 August 2013.

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Welby also claimed in a live TV interview with Channel 4 in April 2019 that he personally had written to the Archbishop of Cape Town in 2013.

In response to questions on this from Daily Maverick this week, Archbishop Makgoba replied: “The matter is the subject of the inquiry panel’s investigation”.

Which brings us to the matter of the review panel looking into the handling of John Smyth by the church in South Africa.  

Anglican Church “marking its own homework”?


The Makin Report concluded that a separate review needed to be undertaken into John Smyth’s activities in South Africa and the handling of the scandal by the relevant local church authorities.

“It is highly likely that he was continuing to abuse young men [in South Africa] and there is some evidence to this effect,” the report found.

“There are some records of him returning to the UK, but these visits do not appear to be for fundraising. How John Smyth funded his quite opulent lifestyle, living in a large house in a quiet suburb of Cape Town, is not known.”

When the report was released in November last year, Makgoba accordingly announced a panel to “review my and the church’s past actions in relation to the John Smyth abuse scandal”.  

Makgoba had assembled a panel seemingly beyond reproach: Dr Mamphela Ramphela, Judge Ian Farlam - and Advocate Jeremy Gauntlett. 

“Three prominent South Africans experienced in human rights issues,” as Makgoba termed them.

Perhaps it didn’t hurt that two of the three already held church posts. Gauntlett, at the time of the panel’s announcement, was the Chancellor of the Anglican Diocese of Cape Town, and Farlam was the Chancellor of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa.

These are not paid posts, Makgoba told Daily Maverick this week; chancellors “give advice on the implementation of canon law and perform functions such as advising a court for the trial of a bishop”.

Makgoba denied that appointing two people who already held church posts to a review of the church’s actions could amount to a conflict of interests, because Farlam and Gauntlett “are not involved in safeguarding matters”.

Not everyone agrees. 

Graystone, who as a result of his years-long work on the Smyth case has become well-versed in church protocol, told Daily Maverick: “If Makgoba wanted to demonstrate that the church was subjecting itself to external scrutiny, in this case over Smyth, you would have thought he would choose people who aren’t already part of the system.” 

Added Graystone: “It smacks of the church marking its own homework”.

Gauntlett faces accusations of predatory past


Not a lot of media attention was paid to the announcement of the review panel - until Wits anthropology academic Hylton White went public with his sexual abuse allegations against Gauntlett after realising with horror that Gauntlett would be one of those reviewing the handling of Smyth.

White has recounted in a public Facebook post, now well-publicised, how he met Gauntlett when he was in his early teens and Gauntlett in his mid-30s, in the 1980s. 

“In my early teens I went up the Hogsback peak with him,” White wrote.

“At a pool halfway up the mountain he undressed me and gripped me between his own naked legs in the water. What he did behind me I can’t say.”

White went on to describe additional grooming by Gauntlett, and incidents including a visit to Gauntlett’s hotel room in Port Elizabeth “where he had me undress so he could bathe me then have sex with me”.

Later on, in Cape Town, White “swam naked with him in his pool at his Constantia home, was groped by him while his wife was a room away, then finally threw him out of my residence room at campus when he dropped me off one day”.

White has stressed that he “consented to all these acts insofar as consent meant anything at that time in my life”.

The academic confronted Gauntlett about the abuse over email in 2022, when White was 52 and Gauntlett 72, and received an apology from Gauntlett seen by Daily Maverick.

Gauntlett told White, as per White’s Facebook post, that there were “no others”.

Multiple legal insiders, speaking on condition of anonymity because Gauntlett is still judged an intimidating and powerful individual, have told Daily Maverick that rumours about Gauntlett demonstrating inappropriate behaviour towards younger men have swirled for years.

Gauntlett did not respond to Daily Maverick’s emailed questions this week.

There are, however, no additional accusations of underage abuse and no known official complaints.

White this week declined to comment further to Daily Maverick as he felt his version of events had already been aired sufficiently.

White added only that he had been disappointed by homophobic and otherwise divisive commentary on social media since the story broke, having had several completely consensual sexual relationships with male peers in his youth.

“I have been very grateful for how these and other queer friends have stepped up for me and my family during this time,” White said.

He added that child sexual exploitation should be treated as child sexual exploitation and not conflated with prejudices around race and sexual orientation.      

Did the Church once again ignore a warning about an abuser?


What prompted White to go public with his story was his frustration with the fact that a mutual friend, Anna-Maria Makhulu, had emailed Archbishop Makgoba to warn him about Gauntlett’s past with regards to the Smyth inquiry on 9 January - and did not receive a response, an out-of-office reply, or an email bounceback.

Makgoba subsequently told News24 that this was due to the church’s poor quality “internal communication during the holiday period”.

This week, the Archbishop told Daily Maverick that the explanation behind his non-response to the Makhulu email should not be released because he had already given it to White and Makhulu, and “it is critical to our safeguarding process that survivors of abuse should know that their interactions with the church are kept confidential”.

The additional complication, however, is that Makhulu also sent her complaint regarding Gauntlett on 9 January to Smyth panel member Mamphela Ramphele. 

Whether Ramphele took any action is unknown; Ramphele has since referred all questions on the matter to the church.

Makgoba told Daily Maverick that when it came to the question of whether Ramphele attempted to alert anyone to the Gauntlett complaint, “I will consider addressing the matter after the [Smyth] panel has reported”.

Ramphele was one of scores of high-profile South Africans, including Democratic Alliance federal chair Helen Zille, who previously nominated Gauntlett for a position on the Bench of the Constitutional Court. 

Makgoba released a statement on the White matter on 18 January, in which he said with regards to White’s Gauntlett account: “No complaint is known to have been made to Safe Church [the Anglican church safeguarding body] or to the church itself on this matter over the past 40 years”.

It was a strange comment, since there was never any suggestion from White that Gauntlett’s abuse took place in any context involving the Anglican church.

Makgoba said that he had accepted Gauntlett’s resignation from the Smyth panel on the grounds of “the well-recognised principle in the law that even the appearance of a conflict of interest can be enough to trigger a recusal from a matter”.

Gauntlett has not made any public statement on the matter, beyond his letter to legal bodies explaining that he was resigning due to “a blitz of media reports concerning my private life” which had become “intolerable for me and for my family”.

The work of the Smyth panel will continue from Farlam and Mamphele.

Asked by Daily Maverick if it might not be preferable to reconstitute the panel in its entirety, Makgoba replied:

“Between [Farlam and Ramphele’s] reputations for the impartial administration of justice and commitment to telling truth to power, I am confident in the integrity of the remaining members of the panel and that their report will reflect this”. DM 

Rebecca Davis can be reached on rebecca@dailymaverick.co.za

Daily Maverick's anonymous tip-off line can be accessed via this link.

Comments

mondlaneabraham Jan 30, 2025, 07:17 AM

Beyond sickening

Jan Lemmer Jan 30, 2025, 07:21 AM

jesus

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 07:40 AM

Generalization is never a fair thing. Last year with the Wilgenhof, Stellies saga, an English speaker here on DM accused Afrikaners of being obsessed with nudity. Wonder if he would now say worse of English people as the churches most representative of them and their top lawyers.........

Andrew 'Mugsy' Spiegel Jan 30, 2025, 07:45 AM

Institutional religion fails again. Its continuing silence is deafening; its inaction very telling.

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 08:37 AM

Pray tell, Andrew, what would you like a church to do, in the complete and utter absence of the actual law do anything?

toAstY bo0rGir Jan 30, 2025, 09:57 AM

um, to not allow rampant paedophilia, would be a great start. Your defensive attitude toward this issue is quite telling...

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 11:16 AM

Wow. They don't. And neither do I. And your comment is way more telling for what it's worth.

manicom Jan 30, 2025, 01:03 PM

Smyth's sexual and brutal physical abuse of these children was as a Church member. Senior Church people were told but the awful thing continued, thanks to brainwashed people whose sense of common decency has been clinically removed and replaced with loyalty to the Church.

Una West Jan 30, 2025, 01:34 PM

You would think their first action would be to protect their flock from predators, not brush it under the carpet. They (and the Catholic church) were at best negligent in their duty to their congregants, at worst who knows what they've covered up?

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 07:53 AM

This is revolting. It also has a clearly biased view. Was the church to arrest this man? Why were the police not told? Did the police do nothing also? The writer blames the church, who cannot arrest and prosecute because of 'separation of church and state' and no mention of police at all.

Van Van Jan 30, 2025, 08:08 AM

The church deal with issues internally and in most cases it doesn’t end well. It helps to remember, that even though we bow to a higher law, that we are indeed subject to the laws of our country. If a criminal act has been perpetrated in a church setting, it should be reported to the police.

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 08:38 AM

Sure, but none of this was ever reported to the police, by anyone, it seems. Well not according to this article. So you think it's ok to fire people if someone accuses them of something with no legal reason?

Gavrel A Jan 30, 2025, 09:50 AM

Are you so naive that you don't understand that this whole issue is about not telling the police. To protect 'good', 'important' church people. How more hypocrite can you make it?

toAstY bo0rGir Jan 30, 2025, 09:53 AM

mate there are actual victims what are you trying to achieve here???

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 11:02 AM

Some sort of blame towards the police, who did nothing, and allowed these things to happen, and for people to blame and hold to account the actual institution responsible for dealing with these things. Which are horrific and must be dealt with.

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 09:29 AM

1. It's more complicated though: what Smyth was actually doing was beating boys at a local school. At that time corporal punishment was still legal in the UK. So the Church investigators didn't know whether their case would stand up in court....

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 09:30 AM

2. Also several of the victims' parents (and some of the victims themselves) pleaded with the Church investigators not to take the case to the police.

megapode Jan 30, 2025, 04:20 PM

And that's the problem. Religious organisations shouldn't deal with these things internally. Once they become aware of something more than gossip they should report it to the relevant authority and stand back. It'll look worse for them, maybe, but less harm will be done.

Claire Scheepers Jan 30, 2025, 08:47 AM

How can the police do anything if the matter is not brought to their attention? If an employee tortures someone in your organisation, do you keep them on but move them to another branch, of fire them and call the cops?

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 08:57 AM

So notifying the church, instead of the police, was the right way to go? Why is it the churches responsibility to report to the police anything happening to private individuals on the basis of an email?

toAstY bo0rGir Jan 30, 2025, 09:53 AM

wow. are you actually defending an institution that allowed an abuser to go unchecked. deferring blame will definitely help the victims! Said no one ever! :D

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 10:57 AM

hah, yes I am defending the church. do you share the same anger towards the police, the ACTUAL BODY DESIGNED TO PROSECUTE LEGAL OFFENDERS, from not doing anything?

Noelsoyizwap Jan 30, 2025, 04:06 PM

Both the victims and perpetrators were church members. So, any action the church takes is subject to scrutiny and judgment

megapode Jan 30, 2025, 04:23 PM

Well what would you do if you had reasonable grounds to believe that somebody was interfering with kids or breaking any other law for that matter? I don't see why churches don't get held to the same standard as the rest of us.

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 09:23 AM

1. Smyth was never an employee of the Church. He did most of his abuse at a school. The church did investigate, but some of the victims' parents pleaded with the Church investigators not to take the matter to the police. Shortly thereafter Smyth fled the UK. ...

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 09:26 AM

2. One of the church investigators made a point of tracking Smyth's movements over the following 20 years (in those pre-internet days) and warning people about what he was like. Hence, Smyth was subsequently kicked out of several associations, and barred from several schools.

Una West Jan 30, 2025, 01:52 PM

It should be any individual's or organisation's responsibility to report abuse (particularly of minors) to the authorities, not look the other way.

M J Jan 31, 2025, 12:06 PM

Don't be disingenuous. They could and should have alerted the police to what was happening. They certainly shouldn't have kept quiet and pretended there wasn't a problem. There is clear evidence that they hid the abuse from police and congregants, and knowingly placed young boys in danger.

Malcolm McManus Jan 30, 2025, 07:53 AM

Men who choose a profession that requires them to wear wigs when carrying out their duties. Something wrong with this picture already.

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 07:57 AM

The only successful rehabilitation for a pedophile is the death penalty.

Jennifer D Jan 30, 2025, 07:57 AM

Sexual abuse of women and children continues, whether homosexual or not. It is covered up by men (and some women) who are guilty of the same. Will it stop? Probably not, but we can expose these low life’s for what they are.

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 09:17 AM

Most of Smyth's victims were older than 16. Some were even in their early twenties. I suppose that make them neither women nor children. Also, Smyth's wife was party to and complicit in the abuse.

Jennifer D Jan 30, 2025, 10:41 AM

So using a power position on a 16 year old, or wifely sanction, excuses sexual abuse? As a young woman, I personally experienced regular sexual innuendo which left me feeling violated and physical overstepping of boundaries from bosses - FYI not women. Time to manage the testosterone!

Kris Marais Jan 30, 2025, 02:01 PM

Your 4th wave feminist rant about testosterone is overtly gross misandry. Your body too produces it. Here ( Ireland) the insane abuse by nuns of girls, women and children is finally infolding in the public domain. Nowhere has anyone blamed oestrogen. The religions provide opportunity for predators.

Mr. Fair Jan 31, 2025, 08:36 AM

I have had women overstepping boundaries many times. I have never. I don't flirt. I have been cheated on and lied to about other men many, many times. ENOUGH of your sexist generalisations, because you were flirted with, and didn't have the courage to report it. Shampies. "Not women" my ass.

M J Jan 31, 2025, 12:15 PM

Most, maybe, certainly not all. And your point? does that make it somehow acceptable.

Charles Jeremy Parsons Jan 30, 2025, 07:59 AM

Terrible. And probably only the tip of the iceberg.

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 08:04 AM

The writer has shown no link at all to these men operating within church approval, has admitted churches aware of the behaviour discommunicated him and surely must know that people can't be treated with dismissal on the basis of mere allegation. Separation of church and state please?

Fred Lightly Said Jan 30, 2025, 08:44 AM

What rock are you living under? These men used Christianity and church structures as cover and a power base to abuse impressionable youths. If you don't see that, you are part of the problem. Religion is commonly used as a cover for many evils. Wake up, forgiveness is not applicable here....

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 09:03 AM

Nobody reported it to the police, Great Ape, or the legal bodies, or anybody else. The article provides no reason to think the church had any reason to act. The men 'used' the church, in your own words. Explain to me why the church should have power to prosecute and jail criminals?

Fred Lightly Said Jan 30, 2025, 09:24 AM

I actually approved your response above (coincidentally), but I chose to expose the banality of the comment rather than block it. The church owes its congregants protection from evil deeds and should investigate and confirm or reject accusations, not remain silent.

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 09:39 AM

Let me get this absolutely clear, you're saying think it's a good idea for the church to be an investigatory body, capable of acting on accusations in a legal way?

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 09:42 AM

The police, legal fraternity, schools and other institutions were all notified via email, and didn't act. Are they also to be legal bodies capable of prosecution?

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 09:47 AM

Banality is not a criteria for whether to approve a post or not. But thank you for your benevolence.

megapode Jan 30, 2025, 04:25 PM

The Church is not responsible for what those men did. But if they knew, or had reasonable grounds for thinking that something vile was going on and just sat on that then they're as guilty as you or I would be if we knew and chose to keep quiet.

M J Jan 31, 2025, 12:18 PM

I don't think you understand what separation of church and state actually means. You keep throwing that in as if it absolves the Church from responsibility or taking action.

Rae Earl Jan 30, 2025, 08:13 AM

One only has to Google or You tube the work of Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris (among others), to get insight into what has been going on in the upper echelons of religion of ALL denominations for hundreds of years. It has never ceased and, apparently, never will.

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 08:42 AM

Dawkins recently admitted he was supremely grateful and very happy to live in a 'christian society'. Why do you think he said that?

Rainer Thiel Jan 30, 2025, 09:30 AM

Pray tell.

Richard Kennard Jan 30, 2025, 12:15 PM

The peaceful vicarage in rural England with all its endearing culture is a far cry from fundamentalist mid US Christianity.

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 09:20 AM

Smyth did most of his abuse at a school. He was never an employee of the church, in fact he was a lawyer...so does this give us insight into the upper echelons of schooling and the bar association too?

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 08:16 AM

Most of the UK abuse happened at Winchester College: why is this article not entitled "the Shame of the Public Schooling system in the UK"?

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 08:41 AM

Bias. But I'll try argue well in the this thread today. I see 2 emails and some other correspondence was sent to the church, nothing to the police, and the church is being told it should've done something. The writer doesn't say what, they can't say what without exposing bias, so lets see.

Rainer Thiel Jan 30, 2025, 09:34 AM

You seem to be wilfully blind to your bias lol.

Johnny Bravo Jan 30, 2025, 10:59 AM

I'm not even hiding it in the slightest my good man. Your bias towards the church is just as clear, yet none of you seem to care that the police and legal fraternity did nothing, only that the 'church' ignored a few emails.

megapode Jan 31, 2025, 09:08 AM

Churches are supposed to be better though, aren't they? They deal in morals, they like to tell the rest of us how we should live. To be taken seriously they have to be squeaky clean, which is why they get criticised more, and also why they try to sweep things like this under the carpet.

Harold Porter Jan 30, 2025, 08:20 AM

Compare and Contrast: DM's coverage of abuse associated with Christians with DM's coverage of abuse associated with people from another religion....

Jane Crankshaw Jan 30, 2025, 08:23 AM

Nothing worse than a wolf in sheep's clothing! It would be interesting to know if either of these men were abused themselves as boys - not as an excuse - both are/were obviously highly intelligent - but it might have influenced their early sexuality.

Richard Kennard Jan 30, 2025, 12:51 PM

Most likely yes. The most feared thrasher in my school days was the diminutive vicar.

megapode Jan 31, 2025, 09:11 AM

Gauntlett seems to have not been a sadist like Smyth was. He was also a young man at a time when being gay was not only frowned upon but illegal. So in that era gay men had to do everything by stealth and subterfuge and in the shadows.

Sergei Rostov Jan 30, 2025, 08:41 AM

Linking Gauntlett to Smyth is "journalism" at its worst.

Fred Lightly Said Jan 30, 2025, 09:11 AM

How so? Smyth's account appears quite credible, with a written apology from Gauntlet. And an unexpected retirement...

Hilary Morris Jan 30, 2025, 09:29 AM

Why?

megapode Jan 31, 2025, 09:31 AM

I don't think they're doing that. The article suggests that there is a pattern of the Anglican church sweeping things under a carpet.

dov Jan 30, 2025, 09:05 AM

Suggested banner for the Cape town Anglican cathedral. "God is not dead, he does not want to be here though."

admi Jan 30, 2025, 09:25 AM

Evil men hiding in the comfort of organized religion - what's new.

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 10:50 AM

I am an agnostic, or maybe follow Spinoza's God, but the substantiate-able truth is that more evil people hide behind atheism and fight religion: Mao Zedong, Stalin, Pol Pot, both Kim Jong's, Marx. Blaming religion for Smyth is like blaming Wall Street for Epstein or the music industry for Diddy.

Mr. Fair Jan 30, 2025, 11:20 AM

The comment you replied to doesn't blame religion for abuse. It's a simple sentence, stating that there is a historical precedent of cover-ups of abusers in churches. Your claims about "more people" can easily be countered too, just look at the middle east. Relax.

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 12:15 PM

That comment openly blames religion. Add the Middle-East anytime you want and see where you get. Problem with Islam is it struggles to segregate religion from government. In fact, it does not even attempt to and there are many Islamic republics of x, y and z. So relax, read carefully.

Mr. Fair Jan 30, 2025, 12:31 PM

Here, let me fix it for you: "Problem with Israel/Zionism is it struggles to segregate religion from government. In fact, it does not even attempt to. Which is the very reason indigenous non-Jews have been displaced/killed/oppressed in the area, and why there is always conflict there."

Mr. Fair Jan 30, 2025, 12:34 PM

Your recent comment contradicts your previous one, defending religion. Now you attack religion. I'm not sure where you stand on organised religion and why? You replied to a post about "organised religion". Please clarify?

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 01:57 PM

Mia: Evil men hiding in the comfort of organized religion – what’s new. = anti religion even to an illiterate. Israel is the only state in the ME where Muslims may vote, and where the free-est Muslims live. Freedom of religion and no homophobia etc. Very patriotic too. Israel is a secular.

Mr. Fair Jan 30, 2025, 02:16 PM

1: Government policy, the flag, almost anything gvnmnt ministers say conflating criticism of Israel with anti-semitism, secular? Free-est Muslims in Israel? Know the names of the 500 Arab villages destroyed to create Israel? 2: Islam is an organised religion, which you defended, then attacked?

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 05:15 PM

I simply pointed out you address religion as if ceteris paribus, and they differ. Deeply. Religion and state must be separated and there is one religion in 2025 that still officially governs states, and it is not Judaism/Christianity. That is what I am against, not the religion per se. Get it?

Mr. Fair Jan 30, 2025, 05:33 PM

Islam has more in common with Judaism than Christianity has - why the slash as if J&C are the same? Recap: you dislike secular governments ("more evil people hide behind atheism"), and religious based governments (e.g Cambodia & Israel), & defend religions that cover up for paedos (Mia's point)?

Jubilee 1516 Jan 30, 2025, 05:15 PM

I have absolutely no idea why you refer to antisemitism???? I do not care if you are antisemite or not. Irrelevant to my point about Mia's statement.

Mr. Fair Jan 30, 2025, 05:38 PM

I was countering your incorrect statement that Israel is secular, democratic, by saying that all you have to do is look at it's past, it's current policies, it's flag, & how Judaism & Israel are mentioned together all the time, often by it's leaders. It's a Jewish state, whether official or not

Con Tester Jan 30, 2025, 01:59 PM

By their own precepts, religions’ murder count throughout history ought to be exactly zero. That’s an inevitably upshot of ????? ??? theories! Ergo, this line of argument defends nothing, and is merely dick measuring to see whose is smallest.

Mr. Fair Jan 31, 2025, 10:52 AM

I think it has been conclusively proven that your comment was simply trying to defend Christianity, but you tried to do it by attacking both secular and religious governments, Islam, and conflating Judaism with Christianity, making a complete mess of your point, and proving your Islamophobia.

Con Tester Jan 30, 2025, 10:19 AM

The number of unctuous excuse-mongering comments made here in defence of the Anglican Church is dismaying. As the essentially self-accorded guardian of social mores, the church has an absolute moral duty to abolish abuse in its ranks, and to confront it when it does occur.

jonathanh37 Jan 30, 2025, 10:30 AM

This is as much about physical abuse as sexual abuse. Corporal punishment is normalised in our homes and institutions, and few comment about it. We should question the sanity of those perpetrators who feel nothing about it as much as those who feel a lot.

jjmeiri Jan 30, 2025, 11:03 AM

Gauntlett was born in the former Southern Rhodesia. At least worth mentioning.

Thomas Cleghorn Jan 30, 2025, 01:54 PM

I do have some sympathy for Jeremy Gauntlett....& his wife. Unless something more egregious surfaces (from Jeremy's past) he really should be left to get along with life. The rest of the story is horrific if somewhat predictable & stereotypicaly affirming.

Nicolette Maritz Jan 30, 2025, 02:36 PM

The finger can be pointed at everyone involved from the schools, the church, the police, the wives/partners of the perpetrators, colleagues, friends, and least of all the parents of the boys. Speak up for God's sake! By saying nothing they're basically enabling and condoning it.

Roke Wood Jan 30, 2025, 05:00 PM

The rather sudden retirement and demise of one of SA's greatest legal minds. One wonders what comes next? Are there any more skeletons in this closet? Will he return to SA or stay in the UK? Who knows what the future holds.

Roke Wood Jan 31, 2025, 07:42 AM

rumours of Gauntlett and his "gayness" was the worst open secret amongst the constituent Bars of SA. Everyone or most of us have heard a story or 3 of his notorious exploits including having a go at more junior members of the Bar. How much truth there is to these rumours remains unknown.

Leon Groenveld Jan 31, 2025, 09:31 AM

More concerning than the disturbing and often disgusting contents of this article, are the defenders and apologists for institutions that, seemingly still!, enable this type of behaviour. As per previous comment: If not reported to police, does the church deem that it never happened? Shame on you.

carlbotha Jan 31, 2025, 06:37 PM

these people will find a safe place in darling

Francois Marais Feb 2, 2025, 09:16 AM

What a tragic scenario. And as always these stories always come to the fore when the men have died or 50 year after these incidents. It is shameful that reverred journalists will write buckets of ink over these stories decades after the fact and expect us to assist in charade.

Francois Marais Feb 2, 2025, 09:23 AM

Rebecca Davis should write about the benefits of closing down the whole religious sector as an economic enterprise and call it what it is: organizations that provide employment for people too lazy to lead a productive life and in many cases a grooming haven for adults living out their fetishes