Commentaries
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Laura Trevelyan In my youth I didn't always feel that life was a gift.
Laura Boobbyer, United Kingdom, 01 December 2005
Laura Trevelyan As he searched for an answer, he sensed that the moment for reconciliation would come and he wrote, ‘Caux is the place’.
01 October 2005
Laura Trevelyan We the peoples of the United Nations determined...to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom,’ begins the UN Charter.
01 August 2005
The value of the food each Briton throws away each day is more than the sum half the world's population has to live on each day.
Mary Lean, United Kingdom, 01 June 2005
Mike Smith, freelance journalist working with IofC Two great windows of opportunity will swing open this year in the fight against world poverty, surely one of the most pressing moral issues of our age. Poverty kills 6,000 children each week—the equivalent of a tsunami a month.
Mike Smith, United Kingdom, 01 April 2005
At the end of last year, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) brought out a sobering report. For every child in the world today who enjoys the security of home, school, healthcare and regular meals, one does not.
Mary Lean, United Kingdom, 01 February 2005
Kenneth Noble A change of job gives you an opportunity to reflect on life—as does a New Year.
Kenneth Noble, United Kingdom, 01 December 2004
The harrowing pictures of starving children may seem a million miles away from the peace and beauty of the Swiss mountains. But Mountain House in the village of Caux, high above Lake Geneva, holds a key to the resolution of such tragedies.
Mary Lean, United Kingdom, 01 October 2004
Abduljalil Sajid, Chairman of the Muslim Council for Religious and Racial Harmony, UK, gives a voice to Muslims who have forgiven in circumstances where many Christians and others would fail the test.
Mary Lean, United Kingdom, 01 August 2004
Mike Smith, freelance journalist working with IofC A new comedy drama, Rhubarb! Rhubarb! by Hugh Steadman Williams, was premièred in a church-based arts centre in London recently. That was appropriate enough: the play is set in the home and family of a Church of England vicar.
Mike Smith, United Kingdom, 01 June 2004
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