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Westgate to the (food) rescue!

“The church wanted to do more in hospitality and developed the idea of making community meals for the vulnerable in our local area” says Anne Wilkinson-Hayes, member of Westgate Baptist Church.

In 2018, the opportunity for Westgate Baptist to increase their hospitality reach began with Anne and a team of volunteers initiating collection of food waste from local cafes, greengrocer and more recently, Coles and Woolworths after being alerted to the amount of food being discarded each year.

Anne has had a long-held interest in the social and environmental benefits of food rescue and has been a driving force in helping form Yarraville’s own food rescue group with volunteers from members of Westgate Baptist Church.

“When we realised that a big portion of food collected was edible, we wanted to do more”, Anne said. “We have a great relationship with the local cafes, and they are very supportive of what we are trying to do”.

The group initially received a $15,000 grant from Maribyrnong Council enabling them to buy compost bins to compost the rescued food waste and start a community garden.

A further grant (from Baptcare) along with support from the Council and other NFP’s, enabled them to build a commercial kitchen in the church so that volunteers could use some of the food towards free community meals for Karen refugees. Westgate Baptist is home to more than 300 Karen people who call the church home. The food rescue group works closely with the Karen community in conjunction with Pastor Ner Dah (Pastor of the Westgate Karen Baptist Church) who has a passion to help the refugee community. Many of the volunteers are Karen.  

In March, the group was about to launch their Rescued Food dinners on Monday nights but in light of COVID-19 restrictions, decided instead to cook rescued food into delicious frozen ready meals (soups, curries, stews) that they made available to friends and neighbours who were sick or in isolation. Since March they have provided over 150 meals for the vulnerable in the community.

As restrictions lift, the plan to is to deliver more community meals to the elderly, the struggling and disadvantaged. The social, environmental and community benefits of this venture are obvious, and Anne and the team have a clear sense of God’s hand leading them as they seek to bless their neighbourhood.  

Source: BUV News

Pray for our churches and communities in lockdown

Pray for our churches and communities

Here at the Baptist Union Support Hub we believe that together, in prayer and listening to His voice, we can be the voice others need to hear through these unprecedented times.

Please join us in daily prayers, especially for our churches, leaders and communities, in the lockdown suburbs in Victoria:

  • Brimbank New Life Baptist Church
  • Church Location postcode within range
  • Glenroy Oak Park Baptist Church 
  • Hume Community Baptist Church
  • Kingsville Zotung Baptist Church
  • Lutuv Baptist Church
  • Melbourne Matu Baptist Church Inc.
  • North Church
  • Sion Church
  • The Terminal Baptist Church
  • Tottenham Bilingual Baptist Church (Evangelica)
  • Western New Community Baptist Church

Download July Prayer Calendar

Source: BUV News

BUV Flourishing Churches Devotions

BUV Flourishing Churches Devotions Part 1: Congregational Life - Discipleship

BUV Flourishing Churches Devotions
 

The vision of the BUV is to be a Union of flourishing churches with Christlike followers that redeems society.  At last year's October Members' Dinner, I detailed the Flourishing Church Framework that our BUV Support Hub staff developed that was to be a major focus during 2020, in our effort to support churches to flourish. The framework looks at 3 focus areas of church life – congregational life, congregational character and congregational mission. Within each focus area we have identified 4 aspects that may contribute to a flourishing church – 12 in total. 

Over the next 3 months, members of the BUV Support Hub staff will provide a weekly devotion and study questions based on one of the 12 aspects of the Flourishing Church Framework.  

These devotions come to you with our hope that they will bless and enrich you. Can I also encourage you to share the series with your church leadership and community as we consider and reflect on how to flourish as the church of Jesus Christ.

 

Rev Daniel Bullock
Director of Mission and Ministries 

 

Part 1: Congregational Life – Discipleship

by Rev Graeme Semple – Regional Pastor, West  

 

All of us want to be part of a flourishing church, to be part of a healthy, growing, developing and thriving community that impacts the community and the world around us with the good news of Jesus Christ. As with anything that you want to see flourish it comes about as a result of intentionally providing a context that enables growth and nurture. For the church this means providing a Kingdom culture that is: – friendly, pleasant, supportive, welcoming and nurturing.  This requires regular inspection and review to be maintained. It doesn’t just happen! Jesus demonstrated and modelled this in His life and the calling of individuals to a life of discipleship.
 

Jesus invited people to “follow Himwith the intention of investing into their lives. This investment was to reproduce the very nature and character of Himself (Rom.8:29). Jesus created and developed such a Kingdom culture and atmosphere around Himself that people from all walks of life were willing to surrender and give up their old life to embrace the new life which He offered: eternal life! (Jn. 3:15)
 

The concept of discipleship is therefore an intentional, lifelong, ongoing process of following Jesus, observing Jesus, listening to Jesus, learning from Jesus and living like Jesus. This is what Jesus developed when He called people to follow Him, so much so, that after the resurrection He said to them, “As the Father has sent Me, I am sending you.” (John 20:21).  Matthew records similar words when He recalls the Great Commission in Matt 28:19 which JB Phillips translates as: “You, then, are to go and make disciples of all nations…” Eugene Peterson in The Message paraphrases it, “Go out and train everyone you meet, far and near, in this way of life…”  The literal understanding of what Jesus commands His disciples is therefore: as you live your life, make disciples and live in such a way that the world will see and know who Jesus is, be drawn to Him and become fellow followers of Him. This is not optional, it is a command.
 

Since the birth of the Church, we can see evidence of congregational life in various forms and expressions that have flourished. In each and every expression there are some key elements that reflect the true nature of discipleship that makes them flourish.  They have established Kingdom values and culture that understands that discipleship is both individual and cooperative which will result in creating flourishing churches.
 

These key elements of discipleship as reflected in Acts 2:42 are:

1. The Apostles teaching which is all about Jesus and understanding who He is, what He has done and continues to do. It is understanding Him in light of the Scriptures. It is understanding Him in light of our need and how He can transform our lives. Flourishing churches devote and invest themselves in the teaching of Scripture both individually and cooperatively.
 

2. The Fellowship – the word koinonia indicates that the people share a friendship to form a community (1 Jn. 1:3); they share their possessions and finances to meet needs (2 Cor.8:4); they share a partnership in the gospel to reach a needy world (Phil.1:5); they share a fellowship in the Spirit (2 Cor. 13:14); they share a partnership in the grace of God (Phil.1:7); they share in a fellowship and partnership in the life and work of Jesus Christ (1Cor.1:9). Flourishing churches invest themselves in the fullness of true fellowship.
 

3. The Breaking of Bread – this is the symbol Jesus gave His disciples that they would always remember Him and what He did (1 Cor. 11:23ff). Flourishing churches regularly gather around the Lord’s Table, The Eucharist, and Communion to constantly remind themselves of who Jesus is and what He has done. It’s all about Him. Flourishing churches break bread together and always remember the life, death and resurrection of Jesus.
 

4. Prayer – The many aspects of prayer – adoration, confession, thanksgiving, supplication, intercession, fasting, and all other elements of a life of prayer. Prayer is the powerhouse of the church, it is the place of dependence on God. It is the place of victory over the enemy. Flourishing churches are praying churches.

The outworking of these elements of discipleship within congregational life will assist in producing flourishing churches. Let us together invest our lives and churches in true intentional discipleship.

Questions for consideration and discussion
 

1. How have you understood the concept of discipleship?
 

2. Which of the key elements of discipleship do you and your church need to be more intentional in and why?
 

3. What does it look like for you and your church, when the Apostle Paul writes in 1 Cor. 1:9 that “God is faithful, who has called you into fellowship and partnership with His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord?”
 

4. Jesus commissioned the disciples by saying “As the Father has sent Me, I am sending you.”  Jesus therefore modelled a flourishing life and community that He empowered His disciples to carry on. In what ways can you and your church continue to live out this model?

Blessings,

Rev Graeme Semple 
 

Source: BUV News

Team building with a Missional edge

Team building with a Missional edge for the EMERGE 2020 Cohort

One of the foci for the BUV is Empowering Leaders for Mission. As an expression of this commitment, EMERGE was launched in February 2020. EMERGE describes 2 experimental pathways for Developing Missional Emerging Leaders. One is an apprenticeship pathway and the other is called ‘Next Steps’, a series of evenings helping local churches to encourage their emerging leaders to take a next step in the development of their character or a leadership skill.  

The apprenticeship pathway is a one-year commitment and the 2020 cohort of 13 participants commenced with an overnight retreat in February. Monthly gatherings for input, encouragement, accountability and peer mentoring explore aspects of leading self, leading others, leading initiatives and leading and living missionally. Each participant needs to be actively serving in a leadership role in church or community and engage monthly with a coach.

As part of a team building exercise on the February retreat for the EMERGE 2020 cohort, teams of 4 or 5 were required to assemble a bike from a flat pack. The bikes had been donated by a family from Syndal Baptist. The EMERGE cohort did a great job in the assembly and then tested them out down a steep driveway! Participants and bikes all survived the test and the bikes were then thoroughly checked by a cycle shop.

Next the 3 bikes, 3 pumps, 3 locks and 3 helmets were donated to make a difference to 3 children at the Mount Waverley North Primary School who do not have their own bikes. Because of the COVID restrictions it was not possible to give them directly to the children, but they were gratefully received on their behalf by the Principal team.

The exercise was a fun way to build team, be on mission together and further build relationships and good will as bridges across which the good news of Jesus can travel.

For more information about EMERGE, plans for a 2021 Cohort and the ‘Next Steps’ pathway (whose commencement has been delayed because of COVID) please contact Bill Brown bill.brown@buv.com.au or 0407821784

 

Source: BUV News

Views from the Manse – Rev W G Gillings

The Rev W G Gillings was a great Bible Scholar and preacher. He was the first minister of the church in St Kilda that became the Pakington St church. (Not the earlier Baptist church in Crimea St.) By the time he left in 1887 to take up missionary service in Bangalore his church had a congregation of 117 and a Sunday school of 250 scholars.

He was an interesting man for it is clear that he liked smart women.

Although the Rev Gillings lived in India from 1887 until his death in 1915 we know that his first wife was an outstanding woman because she was a Biblical scholar who had two articles published in the Victorian Baptist in 1892.

These were very well written and closely argued from the texts. She explored the topic of ‘Women’s Ministry: its Legitimacy and Power’ and in her articles reveals a high level of biblical scholarship.

The articles are too long to reproduce here but the following paragraph will illustrate the point.

Priscilla “expounded the way of God” more perfectly to Apollos, who was an ‘eloquent man’ and mighty in the scriptures”. Phebe was a ‘deaconess’ at Cenchrea and Paul’s helper. Trepehena and Tryphosa were ‘labourers in the Lord’, (Acts xviii and Romans xvi)’. Etc.

She concludes her first essay with:

‘The Corinthians seemed to value specially the ‘gift of tongues’. Perhaps it was outwardly most attractive; but they are taught that all the gifts are necessary, and to profit: for though the body is one, it has many members and all are necessary. The subject (being discussed in 1 Corinthians) is the body of Christ, and not meetings of the church, and the term everyman is the same as everyone, as shown in the above Scriptures’.

These articles were published after her death and in March 1892 The Victorian Baptist published an editorial in response, even though they had a plethora of articles dealing with the death of C H Spurgeon.

It reads as follows:

We published in our January and February editions two short articles from the pen of the late Mrs. Gillings, upon a woman’s position in the Church of God. Mrs. Gillings was a devout and diligent student of the Scriptures and her words will have a great weight for those that remember her. For our own part, we think she has made out a very good case for the right of her sex to minister the word orally and publically when called to do so. We confess that we have come very slowly to concede this point. We have been disposed to look upon such efforts as exceptionally warranted and always needing some apology. We think so no longer, and would be glad to see a general enfranchisement of woman (sic) within the church.

The Rev Gillings married again and his second wife had the sad task of writing a funeral notice for the Bangalore papers.

She was also a woman of letters for the notice is beautifully crafted.

It reads:

       ‘Mrs. G W Gillings respectfully informs her friends of the passing of her beloved and esteemed husband on July 16th 1915, in the 95th year of his natural life, the 75th year of his spiritual life and the 60th year of happy service for his Divine Master, the Lord Jesus Christ.  He is not dead but sleeping ‘through Jesus’ ‘until the day break’.  

I would like to have met these women and wonder where they had been educated?

JS 

 

 

 

Source: BUV News

Friendships, Storytelling and a Thriving Community

It all started with a friendship—with a Syrian woman I met in Shepparton in December 2017. When I asked her how I could help her and other Syrians recently arrived in Shepparton, she said they needed help practicing conversational English.

From that I began to teach classes, creating a program called Thrive Shepparton, with a plan for a creative expansion called Shepparton Story House. When students began to ask for writing and grammar alongside conversation, I knew it was time for Story House to begin.

Only it didn’t begin right away. Unable to secure a new working visa, I went home to the U.S. for nearly a year, during which time Rev Richard Horton at Shepparton Baptist Church contacted me. He’d read my plans for the Story House program and he wanted me to return to Shepparton to begin this program at his church.

In the year and a half since he contacted me, Shepparton Baptist Church has become home to two Congolese fellowships, an Indonesian fellowship, and continues to have an English service each Sunday and a Chinese service fortnightly. In mid-2018, Thrive Friendship Café launched at Shepparton Baptist Church, and friendships began to form between volunteers and close to a dozen Syrian families in our neighbourhood.

My working visa to begin Shepparton Story House at this already diverse church arrived the same week as COVID-19 restrictions. Not wanting to let down our expectant students, in term two we launched our three levels of English classes online, as well as our Bible Story & Chat program and Creative Writing Hub. With God’s grace, these programs have all continued through the past three months, growing despite launching online. Now we’ve also launched our program’s Story Platform with an online storytelling series: “Coming to Australia” which aims to show the diversity of migrants in our city and pave the way for our future story platform program at the church.

These programs aren’t just for our Syrian friends, but for those in our own church and all of those in the community around us who are learning English. So far our program participants have been from over a dozen countries.

It all started with a friendship— and as we hear and tell our own stories through our programs, we are blessed with many friendships across our beautifully diverse community.

Lacey Lengel
Teacher of English to speakers of Other Languages

Source: BUV News

I have a dream

Events around the world over the past couple of weeks have brought back memories to many of us.  Some very good memories about how we treasure our heritage, our sense of belonging to a community that values taking care of each other and standing up for each other.  However, it has also brought back some very difficult and painful ones.

For the past 36 years, I have lost count of the number of times I have been asked where I am from – the latest one being just before the lockdown due to COVID-19.  The question is no doubt because I have a “yellow” skin and thus, I am automatically someone not belonging here even though I have an Australian Passport and has been here for more than I have ever been in any other country.

Unfortunately, I have also not been immune from that question in Churches as well.  How about the situation where we started to attend a Church and for several months, no one was interested in us until we invited one of the Church leaders for lunch at our place and he saw my Theological books on my bookshelves.  He was interested in why I had those books and when I told him that I was studying at a Bible College, I was shortly afterwards placed on the preaching roster.

Sad to say, but often we are judged not according to what we can offer in our service to Christ, not according to the gifts, skills and talents that God has given to us.  It is simply assumed that we are inferior because of the colour of our skin.  Just look around the congregation in your Church.  Most will have a sizeable proportion of members who are from a non-Anglo background – yet, how many are part of the leadership team?  Does it mean we are not capable of leading God’s people or performing other leadership role within the Church?

For more than 20 years now, I have been involved in the role of supporting LOTE (Language Other Than English) Churches.  Over the years, the most common comment that has come across is along the line of: “why is it that LOTE Churches have more problems?”  Is that really the case?  Or, is it the assumption that because it is a LOTE Church and thus, it must have more problems.

I really feel for my brothers and sisters coming here to settle as refugees.  I have had more opportunities than them, I have been more privileged than them and I have had more possibilities to prove my worth than them.  What chance do they have to escape such constant bombarding of unnecessary comments?  How do they feel when they are asked questions indicating that they do not belong here? 

Yet, the word refuge has the meaning of shelter or protection from danger or distress.  That’s not just what the word refuge means in the Bible but is also how it is defined in secular dictionaries. Yet, as believers, we struggle to provide that shelter or protection to those in such great need after enduring so much hardship. 

Has it ever crossed our minds that many refugees in our LOTE Churches have come here through refugee camps where the most basic of necessities are inexistent – no certainty of fresh water or even food on the table every day, no means of getting a decent education, no possibility of having a job to provide for the needs of the family and definitely no possible dreams of a future.

How about the daily harassment of government soldiers heavily armed to intimidate you to provide information so that they can capture someone close to you?  How about them burning all sources of food around your village so that you either starve to death or give them what they want – even information that can cost lives – so that they will leave you alone for a couple of days?

How about when they finally see some light at the end of the tunnel – when they are given a visa to settle in this country – only to find that they are made to feel that they do not belong here?  They are constantly asked where they are from when their only wish is to be able to forget what happened in those refugee camps, the hardship and suffering they went through from where they came from.  How about being unable to get a job because they have not had the opportunity to learn English and thus, cannot express themselves properly in interviews? 

Perhaps, this plea from Paul writing to Philemon, the owner of Onesimus the slave, may help us to change our attitude and see each other not through the colour of our skin but as brothers and sisters in Christ:

15 Perhaps the reason he was separated from you for a little while was that you might have him back forever—16 no longer as a slave, but better than a slave, as a dear brother. He is very dear to me but even dearer to you, both as a fellow man and as a brother in the Lord. (Philemon 15-16, NIV)

The words of Martin Luther King still inspire hope: “I have a dream”- that one day, we will be able to say what Paul is saying here – You are very dear to me both as a fellow human and as a brother or sister in the Lord. I have a dream.

 

Rev Marc Chan

Multicultural Consultant

Source: BUV News

Adapt and Celebrate

The beginning of 2020 was filled with excitement for the leaders and members of the Westgate Karen Baptist Community Church (WKBCC).  The church’s 20th anniversary was coming up along with two weddings. The church anniversary was planned to be a large event held at a conference centre with over 500 expected to attend and speakers invited from overseas.

Sadly, COVID-19 restrictions meant cancellation of these plans. One of the weddings was conducted with just a few guests and the other was postponed. Expectations of how the year had been planned for the church were suddenly very different.

However, the church did not lose hope! As the Apostle Paul describes, “we are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair” (2 Corinthians 4:8, NRSV). I thank God for the way our leaders have been able to adapt to the changes during this challenging time.

When the first government meeting restrictions were announced, our Sunday service on 22nd March was held in the church building just with our worship team and camera crew who broadcast live through Facebook. When Stage 3 restrictions were announced, our leaders had to adapt again, this time to using Zoom for church services. Initially, this was difficult for our church community as many were not familiar with digital technology. Before the first Zoom Sunday service, my wife, our Church secretary and pianist contacted families to help them download and log into Zoom. On 29th March, at our first Zoom Sunday service, over 250 including children joined online!

On 5th April, 2020, our Church 20th anniversary was held via Zoom, with 80 devices in use and over 300 people joining in the celebration which included church members from Hamilton Victoria, Perth and the US. While we missed the opportunity to gather in person and feast together, it was nonetheless a significant event in the history of our church, one we will remember for a long time to come!

Since then, we have increased our church services from three on a Sunday and a mid-week prayer service to online services every evening. Numbers have increased during this time, from children right up to our older members. In fact, more of our older people are attending on Zoom than they were able to in person due to their age. Church members are enjoying the opportunity to chat to one another by Zoom before and after the services, helping them feel connected and less isolated. The church is also having 24 hours of prayer each weekend from Saturday evening to Sunday evening and this time is spent in prayer for all those affected by COVID-19.

In every circumstance, I thank God for guiding us throughout our church’s journey over these past months. May His name be glorified.

Pastor Ner Dah
Westgate Karen Baptist Community Church

Source: BUV News

A grateful heart is a generous heart

Did you know? The BUV family comprises of over 100 LOTE (Languages other than English) faith communities and many of them are from refugee and migrant churches. As a Union, we’ve been inspired and challenged by many of their stories of struggle and overcoming to create a new life here in Australia.

Despite having experienced a great deal of hardship, when the Bushfires hit our state (and beyond) just a few months ago, many of these churches gave generously to the BUV Bushfire Appeal.  We asked a couple of them to share with us why they were inspired to give so sacrificially.

Here’s what they told us:

“We are so grateful to the people and Government of Australia, we feel safe and at home here. It was sad for us to see this tragedy and we wanted to give something back.” said Rev Si Kiah of Lutuv Baptist Church. Many of his congregation members were refugees from Myanmar.

Compassion Christina Church visited Lakes Entrance after the bushfiresCompassion Christian Church members visited Lakes Entrace to show their support after the bushfires earlier this year.

“Australia has been good to us, so we wanted to give something tangible in return” Pastor Denzil Vethamanikam of Compassion Christian Church (with mainly migrants from Sri Lanka) told us. Just prior to COVID-19 travel restrictions, Pastor Denzil also mobilised a two-night trip,  for about 20 people to East Gippsland to visit churches as well as visiting the local cafes, restaurants and accommodation sites to assist them financially. Their story was featured here.

The sentiment of a grateful heart was echoed by many other LOTE churches. Pastor Christopher from Melbourne Karenni Baptist Community Church Inc went above and beyond to collect donations not only from his church but also from Karenni churches in Australia. He and his family personally visited the BUV hub twice to deliver these donations.

Because of these sacrificial acts of giving from our Baptist family, many people around Victoria have been helped and are extremely grateful  – grateful for the giving and also grateful for the work that the BUV are doing in response to the Bushfires. This is made possible by the many; the many who were capable to give and the many who wanted to give sacrificially as an expression of gratitude for the lives they are able to live here in this country and state.

Some of the hardships that are rare to us here in Australia are not uncommon to our refugee communities.  In the midst of upheavals such as the Bushfires, COVID-19, and even most recently,  BLM, their voices and actions are inspiring to all and we are grateful to be able to be ‘better together’.

Source: BUV News

Helping new arrivals grow and flourish as people of God

During Refugee Week (Sunday 14 June to Saturday 20 June) we will share with you some inspiring stories from our refugee communities. Some of these families started their journeys supported by the BUV Refugee Airfare/ Car Assistance Loan Scheme (RAALS) and today, they are growing and flourishing as people of God with stories to tell.

Story of Pa Ling T

"My name is Pa Ling T of Chin Baptist Church. I am married and have one child. We were Chin refugees in India fleeing the Myanmar army's persecution and were resettled in Australia under the Community Pilot Program in 2017. I got a job four days after my arrival in Australia but I did not have a car or a driving license. I depended on friends to drive me to and from work. I also relied on friends to take us for my daughter's ongoing medical appointments.

My wife and I always felt guilty about being a burden to our friends. When these friends moved to their new home, they could no longer drive us around and I felt really helpless.

Around that time, I received good news that my application for the BUV’s RAALS Car Loan was approved. I felt that my burden was lifted.

My wife and I now feel confident as a happy independent family. We no longer feel guilty being a burden to our friends.

Our family express our heartfelt thanks to God and the provision of RAALS. We feel welcomed and feel like Australia is home and we are part of the Australian community."

 

Story of Sui Cung S

Sui Cung S and his family arrived one and a half years ago from Burma. They are active members of Melbourne Chin Church and Sui Cung is a Sunday school teacher. One day, his social worker informed him that he had not been successful in being employed because he didn’t have a car. Through the church, BUV provided a RAALS car loan to Sui Cung and he now has a job and can support his young family and also others within their community who are going through a tough time.

 

About the BUV Refugee Airfare/ Car Assistance Loan Scheme (RAALS)

RAALS was first setup with a gift from Canterbury Baptist church by a committee of concerned Baptist members in 2003. Over the years, other churches and individuals (including many from our Languages Other Than English-speaking communities) provided loans and donations to the RAALS. These loans are interest-free and are repayable within a two year period. All repayments go back into a revolving pool of funds for future loans.

The first people assisted by RAALS were refugees from the Sudanese civil war. These South Sudanese Baptist families were separated from the rest of their family members who were still in refugee camps. Over the years, persecuted Chin and Karen people of Burma, who were granted refugee status by the United Nations, were supported with airfares loans to come to Australia.

Within a few years, RAALS expanded from providing just airfare loans to also providing car loans. Car loans are welcomed by many new refugees and offer great practical assistance to them settling in Australia.

Since 2003, RAALS has brought over 120 families from refugee camps to Australia. Last year, the scheme provided 12 car loans and four airfare loans to support BUV refugee church communities.

RAALS continues to provide assistance to refugees and the BUV is very grateful to many Baptist churches and individuals for ongoing donations. Each of these families supported by RAALS has an inspiring story to share. Many are giving back to their communities and helping others who are going through a tough time. It’s amazing how a small provision of loan can help new arrivals grow and flourish as people of God.

If you wish to support the BUV RAALS, please donate via direct debit:

BSB: 704-922
Account: 100007181
Name: BUV RAALS Gift

All donations to RAALS are tax deductible.
For further information on how to help, please contact Multicultural consultant, Meewon Yang

Source: BUV News