The Sunday Telegraph

Prince applauds families taking in refugees from Ukraine crisis

- By Victoria Ward

THE Prince of Wales has praised the kindness of people opening their homes to Ukrainian and Afghan refugees who face “soul-destroying sorrow and hardship”.

In an Easter message, the Prince remembered the many who have been displaced in recent conflicts.

He also recalled his late father, the Duke of Edinburgh, who he said had always read the Bible verses recounting the Last Supper, when Jesus washed his disciples’ feet, at the Royal family’s annual Maundy Thursday church service.

The Prince said it was an “enormous privilege” to represent the Queen at this year’s service, when Christians remember that humility and sacrifice are “at the heart of our faith”.

Her Majesty was unable to attend for only the fifth time in her reign as she continues to struggle with mobility issues. She is not expected to attend the Easter Sunday service at St George’s Chapel in Windsor either, but will instead mark the day privately.

Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall will also miss the traditiona­l service, as they are understood to be at Birkhall, their Scottish residence.

The Prince has issued his own Easter message for the past few years, using it to address issues from the persecutio­n of Christians worldwide to knife crime.

Last year, he showed his support for Catholicis­m by recording a poem by Gerard Manley Hopkins, a convert Jesuit priest widely regarded as the finest Catholic poet in the English language.

This year, recounting the story of the Last Supper, the Prince said the Lord’s message – to look after and serve one another – was as challengin­g today as it was then. “Today, millions of people find themselves displaced, wearied by their journey from troubled places, wounded by the past, fearful of the future – and in need of a welcome, of rest, and of kindness,” he said.

“Over the past years, I have found myself heartbroke­n at the sufferings of the innocent victims of conflict, or persecutio­n, some of whom I have met and who have told me stories of unutterabl­e tragedy as they have been forced to flee their country and seek shelter far from home.

“But amidst all this sadness and inhumanity, it has been profoundly moving to see how so many people are ready to open their homes to those in need, and how they have offered their time and their resources to help those facing such soul-destroying sorrow and hardship.”

The Prince said that this Easter, he would pray “with all his heart” that the Lord’s example of courage in the face of fear “might help us all dispel the darkness of the world”.

‘It has been profoundly moving to see how so many people are ready to open their homes to those in need’

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