Amity Foundation, China

Amity Foundation, China

The Amity Foundation (zh-s|爱德基金会) is an independent Chinese voluntary organization. It was created in 1985 on the initiative of Christians in China, with the main objective of helping poor areas of the country to develop. Amity headquarters are in Nanjing. The organization is also known for its Amity Printing Company (APC, also sometimes called Amity Printing Press), the largest Bible producer in China.

From faith to social actions

One of the driving forces behind the Amity Foundation has been the desire of Chinese Christians, who like other religious groups had experienced persecution especially during the Cultural Revolution, to contribute to the rebuilding and development of society. From the start, it has worked to spread education, social services, health, and rural development from China's coastal provinces in the east to the minority areas of the west. Amity sees itself not as a faith-based, but a faith-initiated organization and works with Christians, members of other religious communities and atheists alike. Its president is Bishop K. H. Ting.

Activities

*Disaster relief
*Support of church-run social work
*Support of medical education in China's poorest areas
*HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention training
*Education in the countryside and for the children of migrant workers, including the Amity Teachers Program
*Special education (e.g. work with deaf or disabled children)
*Taking care of orphans
*Environmental protection
*Integrated development (e.g. providing basic health care, schooling, clean energy, agricultural skills training and microfinance to a village community)

Amity Printing Company (APC)

The Amity Printing Company (APC, zh-s|爱德印刷有限公司) in Nanjing is the largest producer of Bibles in China, and one of the largest in the world. Partly in cooperation with the United Bible Societies, since 1987 it has published Bibles in Mandarin and in several ethnic minority languages, as well as in many other languages for export.

The APC has so far published more than 50 million Bibles. The Chinese Bibles are distributed not by the state-run bookstore chains (such as Xinhua), but through the network of officially registered Protestant churches. Most of the Bibles printed give the Chinese Union Version, (zh-s|和合本, 1919), the predominant Chinese Bible translation.

ee also

*China Christian Council
*Three-Self Patriotic Movement
*Chinese Bible Translations
*Amity Teachers Program
*Christianity in China
*United Bible Societies

External links

* [http://www.amityfoundation.org.cn Amity Foundation website] (Chinese); [http://www.amityfoundation.org/index.php Amity Foundation website] (English)
* [http://www.amitynewsletter.org/ Amity Newsletter] (ANL), a quarterly English-language publication which reports on Amity's project work
* [http://www.amityprinting.com/cms/index.html Amity Printing Company]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • China —    China was one of the most prominent targets of Protestant missionary activity in the 19th century, though progress was slow for many decades. The first missionary, Robert Morrison (1782 1834), was a British Presbyterian minister commissioned… …   Encyclopedia of Protestantism

  • China Christian Council — Further information: Protestantism in China The China Christian Council (中国基督教协会) or CCC was founded in 1980 as an umbrella organization for all Protestant churches in the People s Republic of China with Bishop K. H. Ting (丁光訓, 1915–) as its… …   Wikipedia

  • Amity Teachers Program — The Amity Teachers Program is a program by the Amity Foundation to send volunteers to China to teach in rural Chinese universities and colleges. The Amity Foundation is a Chinese non governmental organisation which was founded in 1985 by Chinese… …   Wikipedia

  • List of charities in the People's Republic of China — This article is a list of domestic and international charities operating in the People s Republic of China. Contents: Top · 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z List …   Wikipedia

  • Religion in der Volksrepublik China — Die Volksrepublik China ist ein laizistischer Staat und die Mehrheit der Chinesen bekennt sich offiziell zu keiner Konfession. Es gibt bis heute kein nationales Religionsgesetz, sondern nur vielerlei Dokumente. Das Verhältnis des Staats zu den… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 2008 Sichuan earthquake — 2008 Earthquake 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese Union Version — Full name: Chinese Union Version Other names: 和合本 Abbreviation: CUV Language: Chinese OT published: 1919 NT published: 1906 Complete Bible published: 1919 Author(s) …   Wikipedia

  • Ting, K. H. — (Ding, Guangxun) (b. 1915)    Protestant church leader in Communist China    K. H. Ting was born in Shanghai in 1915, the son of a banker and grandson of an Anglican priest. He attended St. John s University in Shanghai and received a B.D. (1942) …   Encyclopedia of Protestantism

  • Lianghui — The lianghui ( zh. 两会) or two organizations is a general term used in many occasions in present day China, most notably the two organizations which make national level political decisions: the National People s Congress (NCP) and Chinese People s …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese New Hymnal — The Chinese New Hymnal (left, published by China Christian Council and printed by Amity Printing Co., Ltd) and The English Chinese Bilingual New Hymnal (right, ditto) …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”