Christian Aid Ireland supports communities to overcome injustice, respond to humanitarian emergencies, campaign for change, and helps people claim the services and rights they are entitled to.
Take part in a fundraising event, campaign for change, join us in prayer or volunteer with us. There are a wealth of ways your time can be used to help people rise out of poverty.
As part of our Christmas Appeal, , Christian Aid Ireland supporters have been highlighting the hunger crisis in flood-hit South Sudan where more than 2 million people are at risk of falling into famine.
For people in South Sudan, fears around coronavirus are very similar to those felt here back home. And just like here, there is also the damage caused by ‘fake news’.
From five-a-side football tournaments to Harvest lunches, find out how St. Paul's Church in Winchmore Hill raised over a thousand pounds for Christian Aid's Refugee Crisis Appeal.
As part of the Big Shift campaign, Christian Aid supporter Luise Schafer, hands a letter in to her local Barclays bank, asking it to stop investing in fossil fuels.
Despite the availability of a life-saving vaccine, efforts to stop the spread of the deadly Ebola virus in northeast Democratic Republic of Congo has been severely hampered by fighting between armed groups and mistrust of aid workers.
A huge congratulations to the Baptist Union of Wales churches on raising an astounding £67,077.73 for its 2016 Christian Aid Ghana Appeal, exceeding its original target by £27,077.73.
In August 2014, the Carmarthen office published Ehangu Gorwelion – a book by former Head of Christian Aid in Wales, Wynne Vittle. £4,000 was raised through its sale, which will go towards maternal health programmes in Ghana.
Welsh MPs, on behalf of local school children, kicked off 2017 in Westminster by delivering New Year messages urging the Prime Minister to consider the rhetoric used to talk about refugees.