- Bill Ind
William Ind commonly known as Bill Ind (born
26 March 1942 ) is a BritishAnglican clergyman and formerlyBishop of Truro .The son of William Robert Ind and Florence Emily Spritey was educated at the
Duke of York's School inDover , at theUniversity of Leeds , where he graduated with aBachelor of Arts in history in 1964 and at theCollege of the Resurrection inMirfield .Ind was ordained deacon in 1966 and priest one year later. From 1966 to 1971, he was curate of
Feltham and from 1971 to 1973 of St Mary, Northolt. In 1974, he became team vicar ofBasingstoke and vice-prinipal of theAston Training Scheme , in 1982director of ordinands of theWinchester Diocese and member of theDoctrine Commission , and in 1984 Honourable Canon ofWinchester , holding all posts until 1987. In the following he wasSuffragan Bishop of Grantham until 1997, when Ind was appointed 14th Bishop of Truro.Since 1967, he has been married to Frances Isobel Bramald; they have three sons.
He is frequently seen in the
BBC seriesAn Island Parish visiting his most distant and remote parish.On 12 May 2007 he announced to the
diocesan synod his intention of retiring on 30 April 2008, his last formal service being the wedding of Ryan Hill and Julie Clemens in Truro Cathedral. [ [http://www.truro.anglican.org/pdf/changingtimes.pdf Statement by Bill Ind on Truro Diocesan website] ]Bill Ind apologises for Church role in Cornish massacre
In June 2007 Bill Ind said that the massacre of thousands during the vicious suppression of a Cornish
Prayer Book Rebellion more than 450 years ago was an "enormous mistake" which the Church should be ashamed of. Speaking at a ceremony atPelynt , acknowledging the "brutality and stupidity" of the atrocities on behalf of the Church, Ind said:"I am often asked about my attitude to the Prayerbook Rebellion and in my opinion, there is no doubt that the
English Government behaved brutally and stupidly and killed many Cornish people. I don't think apologising for something that happened over 500 years ago helps, but I am sorry about what happened and I think it was an enormous mistake."Three years ago the
Celtic League urged the Church to accept its culpability for a period in history which saw one in ten of the indigenous Cornish population massacred.At the Celtic League AGM in October 2004 at
Perranporth , Cornwall delegates from the sic Celtic countries unanimously backed a motion on the Church which included a call for the CoE to acknowledge "its part in provoking and suppressing the 1549 Prayer Book Uprising" and "for all it has done since 1549 and continues to do to suppress Cornwall's national identity, political freedom, language and culture".The Bishop also said: "Everything about Cornwall marks it as a place to be treasured and loved," he said. "It has never been an English shire, it has its own language and it reminds us, by its history, of links to
Ireland ,Wales ,Brittany and a Celtic past." [ [http://www.thisiscornwall.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=144125&command=displayContent&sourceNode=232510&home=yes&more_nodeId1=232470&contentPK=17697818 BISHOP BILL APOLOGISES FOR CORNISH MASSACRE - Western Morning News - June 2007] ]References
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*cite web | url= http://www.dodonline.co.uk/engine.asp?lev1=4&lev2=38&menu=81&biog=y&id=26685| title= DodOnline| publisher= | accessdate=2006-11-24 |
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