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A GROUP of churchgoers has been providing a safe space for Creamfields ravers for the past four years. Members of We are the Church first approached Creamfields organisers in 2016 to ask if they could be there to offer support and provide a relaxing space for festivalgoers. “We’d heard about the work of Festival Angels at other events and wanted to do something similar for our local festival,” said organiser Rev’d Jane Proudfoot from St Wilfrid’s Church in Grappenhall. This year was the fourth time the We Are Church tents made an appearance on the Daresbury fields. The team is made up of volunteers from Warrington and Runcorn from a wide cross-section of local churches. As well as offering a calm and relaxing space and a space to chat for festivalgoers, We are the Church also give out thousands of cups of water over the four-day festival period. “We are there to listen and to let people at the festival know they are loved and cared for,” said Rev’d Jane. “We give out thousands of cups of water over the four days of Creamfields and have amazing conversations. “We want the young people who attend, many of whom may never have been to church, to go away knowing that the Church cares about them.” One grateful festivalgoer made a visit to the church tent and expressed their gratitude on social media. “Just wanted to message and say how amazing the church was at Creamfields this weekend,” they said. “It really was mine and my friend’s safe space with such inspirational volunteers who should be so proud of themselves for helping the people that they do. “It is genuinely amazing! “Keep doing what you are all doing even when it seems tough because you don’t realise how many people’s lives you’re changing. “God bless you.” The volunteers feel ‘privileged’ to be able to work alongside the organisers of the festival and to be part of ‘Creamfields Cares’ which supports the welfare and wellbeing of everyone on the site. Pastor and organiser Jonny Masters, the family and children’s advisor for the Diocese of Chester, said: “The Creamfields Team are incredibly helpful and generous to us, and we couldn’t do what we do without their help and support.” The church team was ‘distressed’ to hear about the death of a young woman from South Wales after she fell ill at Creamfields 2022. Kim Wellens, who works for Warrington Youth for Christ and also helps to organise the volunteers at Creamfields said: “Her family are in our thoughts and prayers. “No one can fail to be affected by such sad news, we want everyone to stay safe.” The volunteers operate entirely on donations from the local churches. To find out more, to donate to We are the Church or to find out about volunteering contact wearethechurchatcreamfields@hotmail.com UCB 1 Radio - interview
20 local BBC radio stations (BBC Radio Leeds at 2:54) The Big Lunch - Konnect Radio (hour programme) Leeds Live - The Leeds Festival 2022 app trying to reunite people with lost passports, phones and even pillows Yorkshire Evening Post - Leeds Festival campers lose all their belongings after 'tent burns down' Festival Angels ask Leeds Festival goers to pre-register phones
A new app to assist Leeds Festival goers if they lose their phone is in place for this year’s festival which takes place over the August Bank Holiday weekend. Liff Happens is working in partnership with Festival Angels, who run the Lost Property tent, to encourage people to register their phone before they arrive on the festival site. Jo Lynch, the coordinator of Festival Angels Lost Property explains, "By registering a phone and giving details of a friend, who is also at the festival, means that if your phone is lost and finds its way to our Lost Property tent we can easily reunite phone and owner." Each year hundreds of items are found on the festival site and handed to Lost Property. Festival Angel volunteers manage to reunite around 60% of the items at the festival and in the weeks following. Festival goers are encouraged to register via leedsfestivalangels.org.uk/lost and Festival Angels volunteers will also be encouraging festival goers to scan a QR code. The 170 strong team of Festival Angels volunteers, will be on hand throughout the event, helping people navigate the site, put up tents and stay safe, and, over the course of the long weekend, will serve at least 50,000 hot drinks through a £7 unlimited refills mug deal. For more information visit leedsfestivalangels.org.uk Around 300,000 people will be attending four of the biggest UK music festivals over August Bank Holiday weekend and Christian volunteers will be on hand to help festival goers have a fun and safe experience. Leeds, with 85,000 people attending, and Reading, which attracts 105,000 people, will see teams of Festival Angels at Leeds and Street Pastors in Reading. At Leeds one hundred and seventy Festival Angels will be running a Prayer Cafe and Lost Property with detached teams offering support and assistance across the festival site including serving drinks to security throughout the night. The Prayer Cafe is expecting to serve at least fifty thousand drinks over the five days of the festival. Paul Blakey MBE is one of the coordinators and says, "Festival Angels are at Leeds Festival for the eleventh year with our amazing teams of volunteers going above and beyond to offer help and support to festival goers to help show that Jesus Loves Festivals. We have discovered at other festivals where our teams have been this year that there is a new interest in spirituality and prayer with many wanting to chat about life and faith with our volunteers. One festival saw two hundred of our Jesus Loves Festivals Gospels requested and distributed. Music festivals are a great opportunity to show faith and love in action amongst those who wouldn't normally engage with church." Street Pastors in Reading are running two tents at Reading Festival for the ninth year with around one hundred and twenty five volunteers serving refreshments and snacks in marquees open 24 hours throughout the five days. Providing a safe place for festival goers to come if they are feeling overwhelmed, anxious or just in need of a chat. The tents are open to everyone including staff, police and security. There are also Street Pastors patrolling all the campsites throughout the five days working with the zone managers and stewards to keep people safe. Sally Leonard, Reading Street Pastor Coordinator, comments, "Last year we saw thirty five thousand people come to the two tents. It is an amazing opportunity to share our faith if asked but just to be caring, listening & helping. Many of the festival goers have asked for prayer over the years and we know of at least one person who went home, found a Church and was baptised off the back of being given a wristband with a piece of scripture written on it!! The tents are often called the Church by the festival goers.” Creamfields, the world's leading dance festival, attracts 80,000 to Daresbury in Cheshire with the local church running We Are Church At Creamfields. The team of over fifty volunteers will be on hand to keep festival goers hydrated by handing out water as well as offering a safe place, prayer, support and Jammy Dodgers in both the camp site and main arena. Rev. Jane Proudfoot, the coordinator of the team, says "This will be our fourth year at Creamfields and after a break because of Covid we can't wait to be back providing a listening ear for festival-goers and staff alike as part of the welfare wing of the festival. It's a privilege for our ecumenical team of wonderful volunteers to be invited by the organisers to serve the festival by offering a safe space, love and compassion as well as our trademark Jammy Dodgers! Please pray for Creamfields.'' In Upton-upon-Severn the Sunshine Festival will see 30,000 festival-goers supported by a team from Upton Baptist Church. This is the final of several festivals over the summer which have included Festival Angels offering support and help across the town and free drinks and music in the church.
Rev. Amy Wearing, pastor of Upton Baptist Church, comments, "This is the first time Festival Angels have been at the Sunshine Festival, and what's great is that we have been invited by the organisers! We are joining with Imagine Ministries in their Tea Tent to share the good news that Jesus loves Festivals and that Jesus loves you! There is a team of over thirty volunteers over the four days, and we are excited to see what God enables us to do." For more information visit festivalangels.org.uk A team of 40 volunteers were part of Kendal Calling Festival Angels in 2022. The team ran a Safe Hub with detached teams supporting people across the festival site.
Over the weekend 25th and 26th June, Festival Angels teams were at both Tune in the Dunes in Perranporth, Cornwall and the Upton-upon-Severn Jazz Festival. Here are some pictures from the teams...
Premier Christianity also reported on a church at Glastonbury - read the article here. |