Sanctuary Foundation faces financial crisis despite reaching 750,000 children
Sanctuary Foundation has issued an urgent appeal for support, warning it may be forced to wind down operations within months despite having reached over 750,000 children through its Great Big Live Assemblies and influenced major UK refugee policies.

Analysis
The numbers are striking: 750,000 children reached through Great Big Live Assemblies. Meaningful influence on UK refugee policy. A small team doing extraordinary work on a shoestring. And now, a warning that it may all have to stop.
Sanctuary Foundation's urgent appeal for support is a sobering reminder of how precarious the finances of even impactful charities can be. The organisation has punched far above its weight — bringing the stories of refugees into school assemblies, shaping the national conversation about welcome and hospitality, and advocating in the corridors of power for those who have no other voice.
The irony is painful. At a moment when the UK's refugee policy is under intense scrutiny, when the need for organisations like Sanctuary Foundation has never been greater, the charity is facing a financial breaking point. The gap between the scale of the need and the resources available to meet it is a structural problem that individual donations alone cannot solve — but they can buy time.
For those who believe in the ministry of welcome — who see in the refugee the face of Christ, as the tradition has always insisted — this is a moment to respond. Sanctuary Foundation's work is not peripheral to the gospel. It is an expression of it.