The Archbishop
of Canterbury On
Assisted Dying Bill in the House of Lords
Dr. Mozammel Haque
The Archbishop of Canterbury resisted the change the Assisted Dying Bill seeks to make in
the House of Lords on 22 October 2021. He said, "
The Archbishop of Canterbury said, “My Lords, I am grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady Meacher, and listened with great attention to her extremely powerful speech. This is an issue on which many of us have personal experiences, often painful and difficult. There is unanimity on these Benches that our current law does not need to be changed, but I know that people of faith hold differing views. No doubt we will hear those today and I look forward to them.”
The Archbishop of Canterbury mentioned, “Everyone here shares the best
of intentions. We should recognise that in how we listen and respond to each
other. I hope no one will seek to divide the House today, but I welcome the
amendment from the noble Lord, Lord Winston, because it draws our focus towards
our use of language. We need clarity and precision in our terms.”
The Archbishop of Canterbury lamented, “Sadly, I believe this Bill to be
unsafe. As a curate and parish priest, I spent time with the dying, the sick
and the bereaved. I still do. All of us have personal experience; I have as
well. We know that the sad truth is that not all people are perfect, not all
families are happy, not everyone is kind and compassionate. No amount of
safeguards can perfect the human heart. No amount of regulation can make a
relative kinder or a doctor infallible. No amount of reassurance can make a
vulnerable or disabled person feel equally safe and equally valued if the law
is changed in this way.”
The Archbishop of Canterbury said, “All of us here are united in wanting
compassion and dignity for those coming to the end of their lives, but it does
not serve compassion if, by granting the wishes of one closest to me, I
expose others to danger, and it does not serve dignity if, in granting the
wishes of one closest to me, I devalue the status and safety of others. I hope
your Lordships will reflect and, while recognising the good intentions we all
share, resist the change the Bill seeks to make.”
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