Thank you for being part of the growing Communion Forest
community. In this newsletter are:
Dates for your diary: upcoming Communion Forest events
202tree Lent resource
New initiatives in the Anglican Communion
Other great pre-existing initiatives we have heard about
The Communion Forest at the Anglican Consultative Council
A link to the recording of the Communion Forest webinar
Please share your stories of tree growing and ecosystem conservation, protection and restoration with us, so we can continue to map and share what is happening across the Anglican Communion - and so we can learn from, encourage and inspire one another. Please get in touch:
communionforest@anglicancommunion.org.
Dates for your diary
Connect, Share and Pray - informal online
gathering
The Communion Forest, the Anglican Communion Environmental Network and
Green Anglicans are together inviting you to use our Lent resource 202tree. This daily guide suggests an action for each day of Lent – all related to trees. Download the resource here
and follow our social media (@CommunionForest) for daily activities and insights. Please share on your platforms and tag us, remembering to use #202tree.
New Initiatives
The Communion Forest team is blessed with two brilliant (very) part-time facilitators, Irene Sebastian-Waweru (for Africa) and Nicholas Pande (for the rest of the world). Irene and Nicholas have been reaching out to provinces across the Communion to find out how they are taking the Communion Forest initiative forwards; to learn about what they are currently doing in terms of ecosystem conservation, protection and restoration; and to see how
the Communion Forest as a global network can support their work.
Here are just some of the exciting new initiatives they have heard about:
Communion Forest Zimbabwe
The Diocese of Central Zimbabwe (Province of Central Africa) has committed 105 hectares of church land for the Communion Forest Zimbabwe. Bishop Ignatius Makumbe dedicated this land, which the Church has embarked on restoring and conserving, during the launch of Green Anglicans Central Zimbabwe. The Church partnered with the Zimbabwean Forest Commission and Environmental Management Agency to inspect the land and give recommendations. A teacher in the school, Nyikadzino Mukaro, an ambassador of the Friends for the Environment in Zimbabwe, donated 800 indigenous trees and the Zimbabwean Forest Commission also donated 100 exotic shade tree seedlings, 20 exotic fruit tree seedlings and 2 baobab tree seedlings.
The Anglican Diocese of South West Tanganyika (Province of Tanzania) has partnered with two government agencies to plant 310,000 trees
in the Njombe region. The Church worked with Njombe Natural Resources & Land Management and Tanzania Forestry Services to acquire barren land in 20 parishes most affected by climate change. The agencies also provided technical support to identify the right trees for different areas.
The Diocese ofCork, Cloyne and Ross (Church of Ireland) is busy preparing for Confirmation season. Bishop Paul Colton is keen to
make a link with Communion Forest by giving each candidate a wildflower seed kit and having a tree planted for them, with a certificate.
Andrew Orr, the Archdeacon of Cork, Ross and Cloyne, said "The Communion Forest is such an important initiative, bringing together Anglican environmental action from around the globe. Ireland is the least wooded country in Europe and we are delighted that our confirmation candidates will be doing their part to develop our native woodlands and increase biodiversity across the entire island".
Pledges to engage with the Communion Forest
In the United States, at least three dioceses of The Episcopal Church have pledged support for the Communion Forest. These include the Diocese of Virginia, the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina and the Episcopal Diocese of Washington. This is part of a wider commitment of The Episcopal Church to the Communion Forest, made at the 2022 Episcopal Church General Convention, which resolved “[t]hat the dioceses of the Episcopal Church pledge to support the Communion Forest initiative… to
plant trees, practice reforestation and regenerative agriculture, protect forests and other plant communities…”
Nicholas and Irene have also been hearing about some great initiatives that have been
going on for some times, including:
The Episcopal Church of the
Philippines’ forestationfor carbon offsetting. Launched in 2013, a total of 167091 trees, including mangroves, have been planted by congregations to date.
The Haiti Reforestation Partnership, supported by the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina, which has planted 16 million trees in Haiti over the last 32 years.
The Anglican Church of Melanesia, through the Pacific Theological College in Fiji, has a project on "Reweaving the Ecological Mat”to help churches, civil society, academia, communities and governments to address the ecological crisis from theological, biblical and indigenous
perspectives.
Good News Gardens,led by The Episcopal Church, is a movement whose mission is “to partner with people in transformational agrarian ministry that feeds body, mind, and spirit”. It encompasses
all sorts of people and bodies involved in a wide variety of food and creation care ministries, including gardening, farming, beekeeping, composting, gleaning, feeding, food justice advocacy.
The Communion Forest at the Anglican Consultative Council, Accra, Ghana
The
Communion Forest initiative was shared with members of the Anglican Consultative Council at its recent meeting in Accra, Ghana. The ACC later passed a resolution affirming the Communion Forest initiative and inviting Churches of the Communion to join it - to be ambitious in using their God-given assets and to weave creation care into the spiritual and liturgical life of the Church.
The video recording of the webinar held in October is available here.The webinar answers the questions about the Communion forest such as: What
is it? Who is it for? How will it work? Where will it be? How can you be involved? What's it got to do with our faith? Is it just about planting trees? (No).
Anglican Communion Office,
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UNITED KINGDOM