For 30 years, the Nyachuru family has been trapped in a nightmare. Guide Nyachuru, a 16-year-old boy with a dream of fixing planes, was found dead and naked in a Zimbabwean Christian camp’s swimming pool in 1992. His brutal fate is now linked to a decades-long reign of sadistic abuse by British barrister John Smyth, who preyed on over 100 vulnerable boys across the UK, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. The Church of England’s silence turned this horror into a global scandal, forcing Archbishop Justin Welby to resign in 2024.
Smyth’s “holy” camps groomed elite schoolboys for leadership, masking *torture as “spiritual discipline.” Victims recall beatings that left buttocks “bruised and scored,” forced nude swims under prayer, naked photos taken “for publicity,” and a vicar’s 1982 report hid the truth , letting Smyth flee to Africa. Guide’s family still doesn’t know how he died . “The pain is suffocating,” says sister Edith, now in England. “What torment did he endure?”
A 2024 church review called it a “coverup,” exporting abuse to Africa. Welby, a former camp leader, apologized but delayed justice. Smyth died in 2018, evading accountability. The Nyachurus now sue the Church of England for negligence , demanding answers, compensation, and reform. Rachel, 87, clings to a single photo of Guide. “We light candles on his death day. Sweep his grave. But no closure ,” Edith says. New Archbishop Sarah Mullally promises change , but can she heal this wound? “The Church protected its reputation, not our brother,” Edith demands. “ Look into this. NOW.” Attorney Rebekah Read calls it “multiple missed chances to stop a monster.” The family’s fight continues.
“This is not a memory. It’s a scream for justice”
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