The strange world of Archbishop Justin Welby
Posted by admin978 on August 11, 2024 · Leave a Comment
The head of the Church of England (and head of the worldwide Anglican Communion), Archbishop Justin Welby, today insisted that Christians “should not be associated with any far-right group – because those groups are unchristian”.
But just who is Justin Welby?
He became Archbishop of Canterbury in 2013, but even by then (aged 57) it seems Welby hadn’t yet discovered his own true identity.
The future Archbishop was brought up as the son of Gavin Welby, a Jew originally named Weiler whose family made and lost a fortune importing peacock feathers.
Gavin Weiler / Welby moved to the USA, where like many of his co-racialists he made another fortune and associated with organised crime during the Prohibition era.
As with several other such shady characters he returned to the UK and became close to influential circles around wartime prime minister Winston Churchill.
After the war Weiler/Welby met and married one of Churchill’s secretaries, Jane Portal. Her uncle Sir Charles Portal had been Chief of the Air Staff, one of the leaders of the ‘terror bombing’ strategy that included the destruction of Dresden in 1945.
The future Archbishop was born in January 1956, and for most of his life he assumed that Gavin Welby / Weiler was his natural father as well as his legal father. It wasn’t until 2016 that tests revealed his natural father was another of Churchill’s staff, Anthony Montague Browne (who in 1988 appeared in a televised discussion defending his old boss Churchill, against criticism from the historian David Irving and the Marxist trade unionist Jack Jones).
Having been married to one Jewish criminal, Archbishop Welby’s mother went on to marry a gentile who worked for one of the 20th century’s most famous kosher crooks.
In 1975 she married the merchant banker Charles Williams, who later became Lord Williams of Elvel. For seven years Williams was a director of the newspaper group headed by the Mossad agent and fraudster Robert Maxwell: he was one of Maxwell’s closest business associates until the latter’s mysterious death in 1991.
When Archbishop Welby presumes to order Christians not to associate with the “far right”, perhaps he should reflect on some of his own family’s associations and on whether they are compatible with “Christian values”, or indeed with any decent European traditions.