March 2025 magazine

March 2025 magazine

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Please find here a link to our March 2025 magazine. Paper copies are available in both of our churches.

In this edition we have a letter about our Mission Community from Julian Heaton, Rector of Bury Parish Church. There are updates from our various groups and organisations as well as a view on the Lunar New Year celebration. There’s also a report from the ‘Growing Younger’ event held recently at Bury Parish Church and news about upcoming events.

The March 2025 magazine also has this piece from Christian Aid. With the government slashing funding on overseas aid, the work done by Christian Aid (and organisations like it) becomes even more critical.

80 years of Christian Aid

For 80 years, Christian Aid has been fighting poverty and injustice. With your support, we’ve been able to offer hope to communities who need it most. Our groundbreaking work began in 1945, when we were founded by British and Irish churches to help refugees following the Second World War.

1940s – We helped refugees in need at the end of the Second World War. We raised more than £80,000 (£3 million plus in today’s money) for emergency supplies in mainland Europe. We supported, equipped and enabled partner churches there to meet the needs of their people.

1950s – We launched Christian Aid Week to raise extra funds. We continued helping refugees in mainland Europe as well as those from Palestine, Korea and China. We supported the establishment of the Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) to enable young people to make a difference, and offered help to churches in countries moving from colonialism to independence to meet the needs of poor people.

1960s – We made a difference in crises affecting Nigeria/Biafra, Kenya and India. We created the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) so that development agencies were seen to work together in times of humanitarian crisis. We helped set the World Development Movement to encourage political campaigning. We addressed racism and poverty in the United States as well as advising Martin Luther King while he was in the UK.

1970s – We drew a link between educating supporters at home about the root causes of poverty and work with partners overseas to eradicate it. We popularised world development issues by providing seed money to establish the New Internationalist magazine. We explained the connection between our consumer culture at home and the global food crisis by launching a campaign to live simply.

Coalition

1980s – We fed hungry people during the Ethiopian famine and those experiencing drought in Mozambique. We led a mass lobby of parliament to call for more official development aid. We created the Southern African Coalition to demand an end to apartheid.

1990s – We linked work in 50 poor countries to campaigns on developing world debt, fair trade and the policies of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. We challenged the stigma and discrimination experienced by people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa. We stood up for and provided food for refugees in Kosovo.

2000s – We campaigned to make poverty history during a war against terror. We reached more than 500,000 people with food, shelter and healthcare after the Asian Tsunami. We publicised the fact that developing countries lose more money through the tax evasion practices of large corporations than they receive through official aid.

2010s – We inform about and campaign against climate change. We champion tax justice. We continue to work with local partners on the ground to make a practical difference to the lives of new waves of refugees locally while campaigning and advocating for change globally.

Something formidable

In the camps, it was Christian Aid that sent the parcels…feeding us for two-and-a-half years, and I never forgot it. Christian Aid helped me to survive and I feel I owe my life to Christian Aid. I vowed there and then to do my best as long as I live, and I’m still doing it – Theodor Davidovic, Refugee and long-term Christian Aid supporter.

And over these 80 years, we’ve harnessed something formidable. Something that can’t be silenced by injustice. Something that refuses to sit back and watch poverty ravage communities. We call it the unstoppable power of hope. Together we can make hope unstoppable.

Right now, we need the power of hope more than ever. As tragic events continue to unfold across the world, we can’t stop here. Donate and help us in making lasting change possible

This year, Christian Aid Week will focus on the poverty in the communities of Burundi. Over 70% of people in Burundi face hunger and poverty every single day. Finding work and food is a constant battle, and even those with a roof over their heads often lack necessities like electricity and clean water.

Please note this date: Christian Aid week 2025 11-17 of May

Ways to donate:

Please give via the website where possible at christianaid.org.uk. Telephone and Postal Donations: Call 020 7523 2493 to donate by telephone. Cheques, Postal Orders, can be sent to: Christian Aid, 35-41 Lower Marsh, London, SE1 7RL

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