As a religious sister and advocate, I can no longer stay silent. My journey has long been marked by pain as I witness the suffering, injustice and hardship that define life in this region. Odisha, an eastern Indian state rich in resources, remains home to some of India’s poorest and most marginalized communities. Despite producing […]| Anglican Ink © 2025
HomeMessagesStatement from Kat and Ben Gibson on their experiences with the Diocese...| Anglican Ink © 2025
It is shaping up to be a complicated Independence Day for the Episcopal Church. We were once the church of the Founding Fathers and presidents—34 of the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence were members of what became our church after the Revolution, and 11 presidents, including George Washington, have professed our faith. Today, however, we […]| Anglican Ink © 2025
Matt Bish’s biographical drama about Anglican martyr Archbishop Janani Luwum earns acclaim at East Africa’s premier film festival A Ugandan film chronicling the final days of Archbishop Janani Luwum has achieved significant recognition at the 2025 Zanzibar International Film Festival (ZIFF), winning two prestigious awards and highlighting an important chapter in African Christian history. “Janani: […]| Anglican Ink © 2025
The President of Kenya, William Ruto, pushed back against his critics, including the primate of the Anglican Church, on Sunday, defending his plans to build an Anglican chapel on the grounds of the State House in Nairobi. Speaking at Kigari Teachers Training College in Embu County during a service marking the 35th anniversary of the […]| Anglican Ink © 2025
The five-diocese Anglican Church of Mexico has split into two parallel provincial structures, each claiming legitimate authority after disputed elections triggered a constitutional crisis that Mexican federal courts have failed to resolve. The crisis began at the June 2022 General Synod when the Most Rev. Enrique Treviño Cruz was elected primate in what observers called […]| Anglican Ink © 2025
A dispute has arisen between Kenyan President William Ruto and the Most Rev. Jackson Ole Sapit over the construction of an 8000-seat chapel within the grounds of State House, Nairobi, igniting a national debate on the boundaries between faith and government in Kenya, a country whose constitution explicitly declares that “there shall be no state […]| Anglican Ink © 2025