EBOOK

Justice Song

The Story Of Christian Aid: Foreword By Gordon Brown

Michael Taylor
(0)
Pages
272
Year
2025
Language
English

About

For nearly 80 years, Christian Aid has been a force for justice on the global stage - speaking truth to power, responding to crises, and challenging the structures that keep people poor.
Justice Song tells the story of this groundbreaking organisation not as a linear history, but through a series of vivid, thematic chapters that trace its evolution from post-war beginnings to present-day campaigns. It explores how a church-founded agency became a pioneering voice in international development, human rights, and political activism - and how that legacy can still inspire action today.
Founded in 1945 by British and Irish churches to support refugees after World War II, Christian Aid has expanded its humanitarian mission across the globe. Always rooted in a vision of justice, it has provided emergency relief, backed long-term development, and championed the rights of the marginalised.
Sir Robert Birley once wrote of Christian Aid's founding Director, Janet Lacey CBE: 'Bureaucracy [...] collapsed at her approach; no one ever broke more rules.' The book will capture the spirit of dissent and innovation which marks both Christian Aid's beginnings and its work today.
From challenging the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to helping found the Voluntary Service Overseas, Disasters Emergency Committee, and Fairtrade Foundation, Christian Aid has consistently pushed beyond the boundaries of traditional charity. It helped set up the World Development Movement to drive political change, advised Martin Luther King during his UK visit, and partnered with leaders like Bishop Oscar Romero.






Bringing together the voices of those who built, worked with, and were transformed by Christian Aid - including staff, partners, and communities around the world - Justice Song reveals an organisation defined by solidarity, defiance, and a restless drive for change. Christian Aid has never shied away from bold alliances or uncomfortable truths. At every turn, it has remained committed to a radical vision: a world where justice sings louder than despair.

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Reviews

"Christian Aid was born into a world where people had woken up afresh to the scale of suffering and disruption around them and were eager to discover what they could do to honour the dignity of their fellow human beings facing displacement, poverty and prejudice. Eighty years on, Christian Aid is not out of business, and the urgency is even greater. No one could be better qualified than Michael Ta
Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury
"Having worked with Christian Aid for more than thirty years, I commend Justice Song. The book not only chronicles the organisation's history but also explores the evolving meaning of development and the changing nature of Christian engagement with global justice. It traces the shift from charity to partnership, from aid to advocacy, reflecting broader changes in theology, politics and practice. J
Robert Beckford, Professor of Climate and Social Justice, University of Winchester
"As a door-to-door collector, a partner (in Haiti) and a director (with Michael Taylor) - from pulpits, in lecture halls and from the red benches (in the House of Lords) - it seems as if Christian Aid has become part of my DNA. This book arrives at a kairos moment in the world we're living in - there was never a greater need for its message."
Leslie Griffiths, Lord Griffiths of Burry Port

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