Jun 12, 2018
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Belgrade Serbia
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For the third year running, Europe will be taking a lead in highlighting the plight and needs of refugees both in Europe and around the world.  Using the ADRA Serbia Community Centre in Belgrade as a base, two live programs will hear first-hand accounts from refugees, reports on ADRA and local church activities, and see how, as a church, we can bring hope.  Jonathan Duffy, the president of ADRA International, will be among the invited guests and will speak about his recent visit with the Rohingya refugees in Myanmar.

Two years ago, refugees were pouring through Belgrade railway station in their tens of thousands. Pictures of the crowded park near the station filled TV screens around the world.  Now the TV cameras have gone, and the news agenda has moved elsewhere, but refugees are still trickling through, with roughly 5,000 in the country at the moment.  People traffickers are still busy.

While fifteen charities were offering assistance at that time, today, ADRA Serbia is one of the few still in action.  During the live broadcast on Saturday, 16 June at 11:00 CET (Central European Time) we will visit the ADRA Community Centre, hear the refugee children’s choir, talk to refugees, and hear how staff are making a significant difference in their lives.  Igor Mitrović, ADRA Serbia director, will also share what motivates him in reaching out to this specific group of people.

Hosted by Corrado Cozzi and Victor Hulbert, Communication directors for the Inter-European and Trans-European Divisions, at 15:00 CET a second live program will take viewers across Europe and around the world.  The two directors became involved in highlighting the refugee crisis in Europe in 2016 and since then have reported from Greece, Italy and France.  “We could not stand by and just watch,” Cozzi states.  “It surely must be our Christian duty to get involved.”

Cozzi goes on to say “When I think ‘refugees’ I think ‘all human beings’. Since the first humans, Adam and Eve, were forced out of Eden, all of us are ‘refugees’ waiting to go back home, the home country God created for us. For me, that’s why the Bible invites us to respect the refugees that it calls ‘strangers’ (Isaiah 56:3), including them also in the commandments.”

In 2016, the pair shared a significant series of reports from Greece that helped focus church members’ minds on the work of ADRA and Adventist Help.  Raising awareness not only assisted with fundraising and recruiting volunteers but encouraged other charities to partner together in projects that would make a bigger difference.

Last year they visited a Sanctuary Church in Castel Volturno, Southern Italy. While their 2016 report focused on Syrian, Iraqi and Afghan refugees, the community here had crossed the Mediterranean Sea from Libya after having made treacherous journeys across the Sahara. Their stories were equally moving.

“I went there with less sympathy than I had for the Syrian refugees,” Hulbert confesses.  “However, when I heard their stories, realized the challenges of violence, poverty or persecution that they faced back at home, my heart opened to them.”  Hulbert was equally impressed by their positive, vibrant Christianity as they worshipped together, many of them having become Christians on the journey, or when they arrived in Italy.  “It is astonishing,” Hulbert reflects. “Today’s businessman can so easily become tomorrow’s refugee… but even in these difficult circumstances, these folk are so positive, and have such hope.”

It is that hope that will prevail in the programs this weekend in a positive worship experience co-sponsored by ADRA, Adventist Review and the two European Divisions.

Take time to tune in as part of your worship service. Visit https://adra.eu/refugees/ to gain ideas and suggestions for how you and your church can participate on a local level.  Resources include a suggested sermon, worship ideas, social media stickers, and, on 16 June, the interface for the live stream broadcasts.

This article was originally published on the Trans-European Division website



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