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March 24, 2010 (ChristianToday):
Prime Minister Gordon Brown and the Archbishop of
Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams have paid tribute to
outgoing Christian Aid director Dr Daleep Mukarji.
Dr Mukarji’s 12 years at the helm of the humanitarian
agency were celebrated at a service of thanksgiving on
Monday.
In a letter read by International Development Secretary
Douglas Alexander, Mr Brown praised Dr Mukarji for being
“central in keeping justice and the fight against
poverty at the top of the political agenda”.
He cited Jubilee 2000 and Make Poverty History as just
two examples of Christian Aid’s reach and influence.
“I know that your work at Christian Aid will have
changed, improved and saved the lives of thousands of
people whom you will never meet but who will remain
forever indebted to you.”
The Prime Minister went on to praise Dr Mukarji and
Christian Aid for continuing to campaign on the
devastating impact of climate change for poor
communities around the world.
“It was your work that helped to link development and
climate in a way that no person and no agency had
managed to do before. The world owes you a great deal in
this regard,” he said.
In a video message, Dr Williams thanked Dr Mukarji for
his “wonderful work” in the last 12 years.
He said: “We have a great deal to be proud of in
Christian Aid, the churches’ agency for development.”
The service at St John’s Church, Waterloo, in central
London, was attended by supporters and staff of
Christian Aid.
The sermon was preached by the Rt Rev John Gladwin,
former Bishop of Chelmsford and former Chair of the
Board of Christian Aid.
He said: “It is not often that we can say that the
communities of poor and marginalised have been given
hope because of the work of one man, but that is what
you got when you appointed a prophet as director of
Christian Aid.”
Dr Mukarji encouraged Christian Aid staff to keep up
their passion for social justice and a world without
poverty.
“For us as Christians, that is a vision of the Kingdom
of God,” he said.
“The work of Christian Aid, day after day after day, is
about people who are not often in the room and who are
not often at the table.
“It’s about people who have been genuinely disempowered
because of their caste or their ethnicity of their
gender or their location or their other factors that we
do know that keep people excluded or marginalised.
“That is what has kept me in my work - and must keep
Christian Aid going.”
Succeeding Dr Mukarji is Loretta Minghella, who takes
over as Christian Aid director next month. (by Brian
Hutt)
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