
https://www.friendsoftheholyland.org.uk/Event/christmas-concert-2023

Date: Thursday 23rd November 2023
Time: 7.15 – 8.15pm
Venue: Farm Street Church, 114 Mount Street, London, W1K 3AH
Join us for an unforgettable evening of prayer, where we will come together to pray for those attending COP28, including Pope Francis in his address.
The evening will consist of time to interact with different prayer stations, Ignatian meditation, experience the power of prayer through music, intercede for our world, listen to the word and adore The Blessed Sacrament.
Praying in communion for wisdom and guidance for ourselves and those meeting at COP28, working towards a better future for all.
Through our collective prayers, we can support and contribute to positive change on a global scale.
Following the prayer session, there will be a time to enjoy refreshments and engage in meaningful conversations with other like-minded young people.
Reserve your spot now and be part of this impactful prayer event that seeks to uplift and empower those striving for a more inclusive and sustainable world.
Contact Beata Rozycka, CAFOD CPC Westminster, on 07789876913 or email brozycka@cafod.org.uk if you have an queries.
Link to register interest or just come along on the day: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/an-hour-of-prayer-for-stewards-of-the-earth-tickets-743661179607

Date: Wednesday 22 November 2023
Time: 5.30-9.00pm
Venue: St George’s Cathedral, Lambeth Rd, London SE1 6HR
Join Aid to the Church in Need at St George’s Cathedral for a special mass and evening to mark #RedWednesday. Celebrated by His Excellency Archbishop Miguel Maury Buendia, Apostolic Nuncio to Great Britain. Concelebrating will be Archbishop John Wilson, Southwark.
See the Cathedral lit red, hear the beautiful voices of the choir, a testimony from ACN’s guest, followed by refreshments with the team.
All are welcome. Please spread the word in your community. The event will also be livestreamed.
5:30pm: Gathering in Courtyard
Be part of the #RW show reel filming. Ahead of group photograph at 5.45pm.
6:00pm: Holy Mass at the Cathedral
Remember our persecuted brothers and sisters in prayer, please join us for sung Holy Mass. Celebrated by His Excellency Archbishop Miguel Maury Buendia, Apostolic Nuncio to Great Britain. Concelebrating will be Archbishop John Wilson, Southwark.
7:15pm: #RW Award Presentation
The Nuncio will present ACN’s first #RedWednesday Award. Followed by a short update on ACN’s ‘Africa Update’ report and how you can help.
7:45pm: Reception
Enjoy refreshments and conversation with ACN staff and fellow benefactors.
9:00pm: Reception Ends
We look forward to marking #RedWednesday with you.
Website link – https://acnuk.org/our-campaigns/redwednesday/
Monthly Memorial Prayer Vigil for refugees and asylum-seekers On the 3rd Monday of every month Outside the Home Office SW1P 4DF 12:30pm to 1:30pm
Praying for
Sign up to receive email news & alerts of changes or cancellation at: homeofficevigil@gmail.com
Co-sponsored by Westminster Justice and Peace Commission
London Catholic Worker and
London Churches Refugee Fund


By Sarah Balwin
Ahead of the potential vote in Parliament on the motion calling for a ceasefire in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Neil Thorns, Director of Advocacy at CAFOD said:
“How have we got to this point? For six weeks we have seen bloodshed upon bloodshed – over 12,000 Israeli and Palestinian civilians have been killed, including several staff from our partner organisations and their families. Politicians from every political party must call for a ceasefire, now – not next week, or next month.
A humanitarian pause does not go far enough. Only a ceasefire can put an end to the killing of civilians, ensure hostages are freed and allow enough aid to meet the huge humanitarian need. Our partners have told us of the unspeakable realities of coping without enough fuel, electricity, water or food.
We cannot sit by and watch as this humanitarian catastrophe unfolds before our eyes. As Pope Francis says, “war is always a defeat”.
LINKS
Donate to CAFOD’s Israeli-Palestinian Crisis Appeal
Write to the UK Foreign Secretary: HERE

Source: Independent Catholic News
Hundreds of thousands of people – of all faiths and none – took to the streets of London on Saturday to demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.
The ‘National March for Palestine’ was the latest in a series of rallies in the capital to appeal for peace since Israel launched an air and ground offensive on Gaza following Hamas’s attack on southern Israel on 7 October. 1,200 people were killed that day and more than 240 people were taken hostage. Israel’s revenge attacks and relentless bombardment have killed more than 11,000 people in 34 days, including over 4,500 children. Water, electricity, food and medical supplies have been stopped. A million people, including hospital patients have been forced to leave north Gaza on foot. Aid agencies warn the death toll will rise as starvation and disease set in.
The head of the World Health Organization told the United Nations Security Council on Friday that Israel’s bombing and siege are already killing one child on average every 10 minutes in Gaza.
Campaigners in Saturday’s march walked peacefully from Hyde Park to the US Embassy across the river Thames in Nine Elms, chanting phrases like “Ceasefire Now”, “In our millions, in our millions we are all Palestinians” and “Free Free Palestine.”
Marching alongside trade unionists, individuals, Buddhist monks, Muslim and Jewish campaigners – often families with children and toddlers in pushchairs – were Catholic, Anglican and Methodist clergy, representatives from Pax Christi, Romero Trust, CAFOD, United Reform Church, Quakers, Methodists, Lutherans and other churches.
One sign read: ‘You can’t build a Holy Land on the mass graves of children’.
Rev Rachel Summers a trainee Anglican priest said: “21 years ago I went to visit Gaza. When I came back I was saying to everyone I met – How are people managing to keep their humanity? These are intolerable conditions. How are people surviving? Peace isn’t an airy fairy idea where people sit around doing nothing. Peace is something that takes strength and courage, and that seems to be what I’m hearing here.”
One Pax Christi placard quoted Pope Francis: “And we ask peace for this world subjected to arms dealers, who profit from the good of men and women.”
A Catholic priest told ICN: “Several of my parishioners are here. We all felt it’s the least we can do. A tragedy is unfolding in the Holy Land. What is happening there is nothing less than ethnic cleansing – another Nakba. I hope and pray it can be stopped.”
London authorities estimate that around 300,000 people took part in the march. Organizers said turnout was as high as one million.
The march went ahead despite criticism from Home Secretary Suella Braverman who described the demonstrations as “hate marches” and suggested earlier in the week that the protest should have been banned by London police given that it coincided with Armistice Day.
British Army veteran and march participant Nadia Mitchell wrote for OpenDemocracy: “Personally, I cannot think of a more appropriate day to demand a ceasefire than on the day we remember the mother of all ceasefires, to remember and honour those who sacrificed their lives in pursuit of peace and an end to war.”
Addressing the rally, actress Maxine Peake said: ” This is not a hate march. This is a cry for love, this is a cry for peace, this is a cry for ceasefire”.
The police said no major incidents took place on the peace march – which had been carefully routed to take place more than a mile away from the Cenotaph where the Remembrance Day ceremony was held, and not begin until more than an hour after it had finished. Hundreds of volunteer stewards ensured people didn’t stray from the designated route.
In stark contrast there were major clashes in Whitehall when a small group of rowdy men, led by the far-right figure Tommy Robinson, attacked police by the Cenotaph while the Remembrance service was taking place.
Matt Twist, assistant commissioner at the Met, says 126 people have been arrested so far. He said when they were stopped and searched, weapons including a knife, a baton and knuckleduster and class A drugs were found. “Thanks to the considerable efforts of our officers, who put themselves in harm’s way, nobody was able to reach the Cenotaph, which was protected at all times,” he said.
Twist added that nine police officers had been injured with two requiring hospital treatment. Clashes with the group also took place in other parts of the city, including Chinatown and near the Houses of Parliament.
The march was organised by Stop the War, Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) and other peace groups.
For more information and resources visit Pax Christi’s Israel and Palestine page:
https://paxchristi.org.uk/campaigns/israel-and-palestine/
See ICN’s Facebook page for more pictures: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064591363750&ref=bookmarks

National March for Palestine – Ceasefire Now
Saturday 11 November, 12 noon – 4pm, Hyde Park, London
Pax Christi and other Christians will be joining the national ‘March for Palestine’ in London this Saturday, 11th November, to add our voice to demands for a ceasefire in Gaza and a just peace between Israel and Palestine.
Meeting at 11.30am at the Animals in War Memorial which is at Brook Gate, Hyde Park, Park Lane.
Please note some tube lines are closed for part of Saturday 11th November https://londonist.com/london/tfl-to-close-tube-lines-next-weekend
Given that things may change, please let Pax Christi know if you are planning to attend and want to join them. Check their website, Facebook Page and Twitter/X feed for updates. Pax Christi

Source: Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales
Bishop Declan Lang, Chair of the Bishops’ Conference’s International Affairs department, and Bishop Nicholas Hudson, Chair of the Holy Land Co-ordination have released a statement on the ongoing Israel/Hamas war:
“To our brothers and sisters across the Holy Land, particularly those sheltering in the Parish of the Holy Family in Gaza along with those in the West Bank, we remain close to you and in constant prayer for you at this most difficult, terrifying, and testing of times. May the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you always.
“To our own government, we urge you to continue your diplomatic efforts for a ceasefire, the immediate release of all hostages and the facilitation of humanitarian aid so that desperately needed food, water, fuel, and medical supplies can be safely delivered into Gaza. We will continue to add our voice to the impassioned chorus calling for justice, peace, and the cessation of the suffering that has descended upon the Holy Land.
“To the Catholic Community here in England and Wales, please join us in prayer for those in the Holy Land, particularly for those who have been taken hostage, those who have been killed, those who have been injured, and their families.
“We also pray for those who are wearied by the conflict to receive strength, and those in positions of power and authority receive the wisdom to guide them into ways of peace and justice.”
Bishop Declan Lang
Chair, Department for International Affairs
Bishop Nicholas Hudson
Chair, Holy Land Co-ordination
Since 1998, the Department for International Affairs has organised the annual meeting of the Co-ordination of Episcopal Conferences in Support of the Church of the Holy Land. It’s a pilgrimage of prayer and persuasion by bishops from around the world. The delegation stands in solidarity with the Christians of the Holy Land.
Cardinal Pizzaballa: Unite our feelings with those of Jesus at this tragic moment for the Holy Land
On 24 October, after weeks of conflict and violence in the Holy Land, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem addressed a letter to the faithful under his jurisdiction.
Read More
Cardinal calls for sustained prayers for peace
on 13 October, Cardinal Nichols urged the faithful to pray for peace as the conflict escalated.
Read More

Source: Independent Catholic News
Home Secretary Suella Braverman announced on Saturday she is planning to propose new laws to limit the use of tents by homeless people, saying many of them see it as “a lifestyle choice.”
She said on X: “We cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a lifestyle choice. Unless we step in now to stop this, British cities will go the way of places in the US like San Francisco and Los Angeles, where weak policies have led to an explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor.
“Nobody in Britain should be living in a tent on our streets. There are options for people who don’t want to be sleeping rough, and the government is working with local authorities to strengthen wraparound support including treatment for those with drug and alcohol addiction.”
Fr Dominic Robinson SJ Chair of Justice and Peace, Diocese of Westminster said: “On behalf of those homeless we serve and for whom it is our duty to advocate, it is deeply disturbing to hear reports of further moves which will criminalise and punish the homeless simply for being homeless. We know from our work on the ground in central London and further afield that there is a tragic lack of fit for purpose accommodation for those who, through no fault of their own, find themselves without the basic human right to shelter. The guests we see at our services are not making a ‘lifestyle choice’ – rather they have no options left.
“Banning tents from public places and criminalising agencies that provide them is cruel beyond belief and unacceptable in civilised society. The success of the repeal of the Vagrancy Act is now in danger, as politicians from across the party divides have been pointing out, of being replaced by even harsher legislation which will push the street population further into a subculture of society.
“The principles of Christian social teaching demand that any move to further punish those homeless who already suffer on the margins of society through no fault of their own must be resisted as robustly as possible.”
Mick Clarke, Chief Executive of The Passage in Victoria, central London, said: “The Passage strongly condemns the new enforcement powers outlined by the Home Secretary, regarding street homelessness.
“We believe everyone deserves a place to call home; that no one should ever have to sleep on the streets, or indeed in a tent on the streets. This policy risks demonising the poorest in our society without even beginning to address the real issues facing our country regarding poverty and homelessness. In the long term, building more social housing and seeking to prevent homelessness occurring in the first place must be the priority, yet the simple fact is that the government could be taking immediate steps to alleviate the homelessness crisis, such as unfreezing Local Housing Allowance and creating more emergency accommodation.
“The Home Secretary states that homelessness is a ‘lifestyle choice’ and that ‘there are options for people who don’t want to be sleeping rough..” However, the stark reality on the ground is that many local authorities are no longer able to provide accommodation for those most in need; some have even been forced to either give, or direct people towards tents as they are simply unable to offer any other housing solution. The people that we work with have certainly not chosen to be on the streets; circumstances have put them there.
“When the Home Secretary speaks of wanting to stop crime blighting our communities, this is of course something with which we all agree. However, these measures will do nothing to address the causes of crime and it is important to realise that those on the streets are far more likely to be victims of crime rather than perpetrators. Instead, to focus on addressing issues such as drug dealing and modern slavery – which puts many who are street homeless at risk – would be significantly more effective than criminalising homelessness.
“All of this comes days after the highest monthly increase ever recorded for those sleeping out on our streets since records began. Instead of taking the opportunity to repeal the archaic Vagrancy Act and address the anti-social behaviour that those on the streets and in the wider community are victims of, we are presented with a set of measures designed for show with no substance to tackle the real cause of the scandal – that being far too many people now experiencing street homelessness.
“There are so many good people and organisations – charities, voluntary and community groups, companies, and local and central government civil servants – who are working tirelessly to address the scandal of street homelessness in our country and we’re very proud to work with and alongside such committed partners.
“During the Covid-19 pandemic, street homelessness was treated as a public health emergency, which led to society coming together to implement the Everyone In initiative. Instead of headline grabbing politics, we need policies that address the core issues; we urgently need to re-frame street homelessness and adopt measures that will prevent it from happening in the first place.
“The latest official figures show that as winter approaches, the number of people who are street homeless is going to be at a level not seen for over two decades. Every single one is a human being and a personal tragedy. With the impact of the cost of living crisis, we are seeing more people at risk of street homelessness who would never have thought they would be in that position.
“This winter, we are facing an emergency on our streets. We desperately need the right policies in place to address the scandal that is street homelessness. Frontline staff at The Passage, in collaboration with our partners, work tirelessly to support some of the most vulnerable people in our society. We will not stop until we have ended the national shame that is street homelessness in 21st century Britain and instead of criminalising homelessness, we strongly encourage the government to work with us, and countless others, to bring about lasting change. As evidenced during the pandemic, there is so much more that can be achieved by working together to end street homelessness.
“We therefore urge the government to once again take this collaborative approach and work with us to end homelessness for good.”
Martin, a homeless man who has lived around Fitzrovia in London for the past two years told ICN: “A tent really makes a difference. In the winter it keeps you a bit warmer, out of the rain and safer. It also gives you some privacy. You’re less likely to get kicked or spat on.”
There will be a Service of Commemoration for those who have died homeless in London in the last year at St Martin in the Fields, on Thursday, 9 November, from 11am -1pm.