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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CAFOD Logo

The Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD)[1] is an international development charity and the official aid agency of the Catholic Church in England and Wales. Its stated aim is to tackle poverty globally. Through local Catholic Church and secular partners, its aims to help people directly in their own communities and campaigns for global justice.

Established in 1960,[2] it is funded by the Catholic community in England and Wales, the British government (through UK aid), private and institutional donors, and the general public.

CAFOD is part of Caritas Internationalis, the worldwide federation of Catholic aid organisations with a presence in 165 countries and is a member of the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) and the British Overseas Aid Group.

CAFOD's Director Christine Allen was appointed in March 2019. In 2019/20 CAFOD's income was £45million and it employed approximately 410 staff along with more than 6,000 volunteers carrying out a range of roles such as campaigning, fundraising, media, office support and youth work.

CAFOD's work is based on Gospel values and Catholic social teaching.[3]

History

CAFOD's origins can be traced back to the launch of a Family Fast Day organised by a group of Catholic women in 1960, who used the money saved through fasting to support a project in Dominica. The Bishops' Conference of England and Wales registered the charity in 1962.[2] Its current governing document dates from 2015.[4]

In 2020, CAFOD launched a new strategy, Our Common Home, based on Pope Francis' encyclical Laudato Si', which calls for a new definition of progress rooted in integral ecology, recognising that everything is connected and hearing both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor, calling on all people to dialogue in society about how best to tackle the global issue.[citation needed]

CAFOD's magazine, Side by Side, is published quarterly.[2]

Campaigns

CAFOD has had many campaigns over the years and participated in joint campaigns with other charities such as:

As of 2023, CAFOD's current campaigns are:

  • Fix the Food System, which is concerned with "the way the world produces food and how powerful agribusiness companies affect small-scale farmers who try to make a living from what they can grow".[7]
  • Human Rights Defenders
  • Build Bridges not Walls
  • Stop Cowboy Lenders[8]

CAFOD supports and administers the process whereby Catholic communities (churches, schools, religious orders and chaplaincies) can apply for the Livesimply award, through which communities can record, celebrate and develop their approach to living simply, in solidarity with people in poverty and sustainably with creation.[9][10] Participation in CAFOD's LiveSimply programme has been commended by the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales.[11]

Celebrity ambassadors

International programmes

CAFOD currently has programmes in 32 countries and has offices in Cambodia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Goma and Kinshasa), Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Myanmar (Burma), Nicaragua, Niger, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Sudan and Zimbabwe. [citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Catholic international development charity | CAFOD". cafod.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  2. ^ a b c Side by Side: The Cafod magazine, published Spring 2022
  3. ^ "CAFOD and Catholicism | CAFOD". cafod.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  4. ^ Charities Commission for England and Wales, Catholic Agency for Overseas Development: Governing Document, accessed 30 May 2022
  5. ^ CAFOD, Power to be: How lack of electricity affects everything – and what you can do about it, published 2017, accessed 18 Match 2023
  6. ^ "CAFOD's past climate campaigns | CAFOD".
  7. ^ Diocese of Brentwood, Join CAFOD's 'Fix the Food System' campaign, published 18 June 2022, accessed 10 November 2023
  8. ^ "Latest campaigns | CAFOD".
  9. ^ CAFOD, Your Guide to the Livesimply award, accessed 1 July 2023
  10. ^ The Archdiocese of Birmingham, St John Henry Newman Parish is a LiveSimply Parish, accessed 1 July 2023
  11. ^ Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales, Plenary Resolutions: Environment, St Winefride, Eucharistic Congress and Conflict in Gaza, published 17 November 2023, accessed 30 November 2023
  12. ^ "Our celebrity ambassadors | CAFOD". cafod.org.uk. Retrieved 2019-06-05.

External links

This page was last edited on 10 April 2024, at 17:22
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