There are those that fall into ruin, those that are sold to the highest bidder, those few that still welcome their faithful, and then those that are burning these days. For every church that is reinvented, a dozen are demolished. Yet, in addition to being an important part of our heritage, our churches are above all a vast network of infrastructures at the service of their communities, located in the heart of each Quebec village. What if, in order to reshape Quebec, we made them an engine of economic and social development for our communities?
RIA / Enabling Social Investment Opportunities Outside of Affordable Housing
There are seemingly not enough social impact investment opportunities to quench investor appetite in Canada.
If we remove the opportunities to invest in green energy, and instead analyze opportunities to invest in communities, we see very little by way of investment. Considering this state of the social impact investment landscape, how can investors intent on having an impact, fund opportunities that create lasting social change while generating a fair return?
CBC / Historic McDougall United Church seeks development proposals for downtown Edmonton land
Radio Canada / Célébrer là où ça faisait mal
Toronto Star / Let’s reboot Canada’s infrastructure by including the community sector
Montreal Gazette/ What if Montreal's shuttered churches became ‘centres of gravity for joy’?
Anglican Journal / The colonizing instinct is all over us
Is colonialism in the past? The Rev. Graham Singh, priest at St. Jax in Montreal and executive director of the Trinity Centres Foundation—which helps “transform church properties for community impact”—doesn’t seem convinced. In this podcast conversation, Matthew Townsend, editor of the Anglican Journal and Epiphanies, talks with Singh about decolonization, the church and changes that may yoke those subjects together. This conversation has been edited for brevity and clarity.