Living Letters Team Visits Angola and Mozambique
Contact: Juan Michel, World Council of Churches, +41 22 791 6153, +41 79 507 6363, media@wcc-coe.org
GENEVA, July 20 /Standard Newswire/ -- A team of church representatives from Portugal, Switzerland and Brazil is paying a solidarity visit to churches, ecumenical organizations and civil society organizations in Angola and Mozambique from 18 to 28 July.
Travelling as a "Living Letters" team on behalf of the World Council of Churches (WCC), the group will spend five days in each of the two countries, which share some common historical traits of colonial rule, liberation, civil war and reconstruction. In both countries churches are engaged in reconciliation efforts and overcoming violence.
In Angola the visit is being hosted by the Council of Christian Churches in Angola (CICA). After gaining independence from Portugal in 1975, the country suffered a 27-year civil war which killed hundreds of thousands of people and devastated the economy and infrastructure. Despite the current post-war reconstruction boom the majority of the population still lives in poverty.
The Christian Council of Mozambique (CCM) hosts the Living Letters team in the second leg of the visit. Shortly after its independence from Portugal in 1975, Mozambique was drawn into the struggle against white rule taking place in neighbouring South Africa and Rhodesia (today's Zimbabwe). Until a political settlement was reached in 1992, war and famine killed up to a million people. Between 2000 and 2002 successive floods and a severe drought hit the country. Today economic growth is fast, although poverty is widespread.
Living Letters are small ecumenical teams visiting a country to listen, learn, share approaches and help to confront challenges in order to overcome violence, promote and pray for peace. They are organized in the context of the WCC's Decade to Overcome Violence in order to prepare for the International Ecumenical Peace Convocation in 2011.
Members of the ecumenical delegation include:
• Dr David Valente, general secretary, Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Portugal
• Ms Anja Michel, Reformed Churches of Bern-Jura-Solothurn, Switzerland
• Ms Marilia Schüller, Koinonia, Brazil
Information and pictures of the Living Letters visit to Angola and Mozambique will be made available at:
WCC member churches in Angola: www.oikoumene.org/?id=4551
WCC member churches in Mozambique: www.oikoumene.org/?id=4625
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia, from the Methodist Church in Kenya. Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland.