## **Trustees' Annual Report for the period** 

Period start date Period end date 

**From** 1st April 2022 **To** 31st March 2023 

## Section A                        Reference and administration details 

**Charity name Other names charity is known by** MJR **Registered charity number (if any)** 1161441 **Charity's principal address** 115 Preston Hill Kenton, Harrow Middlesex **Postcode HA3 9SQ** 

Movement for Justice and Reconciliation 

## **Names of the charity trustees who manage the charity** 

|1<br>2<br>3<br>4<br>5<br>6<br>7<br>8<br>9<br>10|**Trustee name**|**Office (if any)**|**Dates active if not for whole**<br>**year **|**Name of person (or body) entitled**<br>**to appoint trustee (ifany)**|
|---|---|---|---|---|
||Revd Alton Bell|Chair|||
||Revd Karen Lund||||
||Keith Cottrell||||
||Clive Ireson||||
||Sarah-Jane Adejei||||
||Khareem Jamal||||
||Beatrice Smith||||
||||||
||||||
||||||
||||||



## **Section B              Structure, governance and management** 

## **Description of the charity’s trusts** 

Constitution and Governance Type of governing document (eg. trust deed, constitution) CIO How the charity is constituted (eg. trust, association, company) 

Appointed by resolution in properly constituted trustee meeting Trustee selection methods 

(eg. appointed by, elected by) 

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You **may choose** to include additional information, where relevant, about: 

- policies and procedures adopted for the induction and training of trustees; 

- the charity’s organisational structure and any wider network with which the charity works; 

During the year, the Trustees have reviewed and ratified current policy and strategy documents. These include: 

      - Trustee responsibilities and Financial Procedures Policy 

      - Data Protection Policy 

      - Structure and Working Groups Policy 

      - Safeguarding Policy 

      - Reviewed our aims and objectives 

   - The Trustees have also agreed a process for trustee re-election in accordance to the MJR Constitution. 

- relationship with any related parties; 

- trustees’ consideration of major risks and the system and procedures to manage them. 

## **Section C                    Objectives and activities** 

|**Summary of the objects of the**<br>**charity set out in its**<br>**governing document**<br>**Summary of the main**<br>**activities undertaken for the**<br>**public benefit in relation to**<br>**these objects (include within**<br>**this section the statutory**<br>**declaration that trustees have**<br>**had regard to the guidance**<br>**issued by the Charity**<br>**Commission on public**<br>**benefit)**|1.To advance the education of the public in general on the subject of colonial<br>slavery and industrial exploitation in the 18thand 19thcenturies and the effect it<br>has had on today’s society, in particular but not exclusively by raising<br>awareness and providing information about how this era of our nation’s history<br>is impacting on British society today, and by promoting research in all aspects of<br>this subject and publishing the results.<br>2. To develop the capacity and skills of members of socially and economically<br>disadvantaged communities in such a way that they are better able to meet<br>their needs, identify problems and to participate more fully in society.<br>3.Such other purposes as are exclusively charitable in accordance with the laws<br>of England and Wales as the trustees may from time to time decide.|
|---|---|
||The Movement for Justice and Reconciliation operates in accordance with the<br>Constitution and Governance document submitted to the Charity Commission<br>in April 2015.<br>The trustees are satisfied that the charity is complying with the terms of this<br>governance document and have complied with their duty to have due regard to<br>the guidance on public benefit published by the commission in exercising their<br>powers and duties.<br>In particular, MJR are continuing to conduct research relating to legacy issues<br>with the view of organising wider projects focussing on the findings. These<br>projects will be undertaken in collaboration with academic institutions, various<br>local community groups and faith-based organisations in Britain & Ireland.|



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Section D                      Achievements and performance 

## **Summary of the main achievements of the charity during the year** 

## **1. Research** 

MJR are pursuing the promoting of the film, ‘After The Flood’ throughout the UK and beyond. Copies for Individual hire or purchase are available on our website, www.mjr-uk.com. We are at the feasibility stage of a virtual reality project to depict life on slave ships during the ‘middle passage’. 

## **2. The Film ‘After the Flood’** 

The project started in earnest in 2021 with the working title of ‘Christian Reconciliation: Repairing the damage of the transatlantic slave trade’ The finished documentary, ‘After the Flood: the church, slavery and reconciliation' was released in February 2022 and premiered at Bloomsbury Baptist Church, Central London on 25[th] May 2022. The anniversary of the death of George Floyd in the United States of America. Since then, we have had screenings at the Methodist Central Hall, Manchester, the Church of England’s General Synod in York and also at the Lambeth Conference in Canterbury, Kent. The places where screening have occurred are listed on our website, www.mjr-uk.com. We continue to have screenings across the UK, followed by questions being fielded by a panel of experts, including many of the participants in the film. 

The intention is for the film to be both educational and redemptive. It is achieving the following: 

- Raising awareness of Britain’s leading role in the transatlantic slave trade, and how the churches were complicit in the trade. The aim is to bring about racial reconciliation to foster convivial societies. 

- Providing encouragement to existing community cohesion projects and to act as a catalyst for new local community-led projects seeking to address legacy issues identified. 

- Creating greater national collective understanding and sharing of information and ideas to address legacy issues relating to our core values. 

- Produce concrete practical models of reconciliation. 

## **3. MJR Manchester** 

In addition to the legacy of enslavement, MJR is also investigating the legacy of industrial exploitation. This was an issue highlighted in the ‘Proving Legacy’ research on educational achievement in 2019, which showed that poverty affects achievement levels among the white working classes more than any other group. 

MJR works closely with the Nazarene Theological College, Manchester, who are advisors to MJR, and co-hosts a social justice course there. This is an ongoing piece of work. 

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**Brief statement of the charity’s policy on reserves** 

These is no formal policy on reserves. Current fixed costs are minimal and Trustees’ are confident of the charity’s financial security. The policy on Minimal Reserves is to always keep the equivalent of at least six months expenditure available. 

**Details of any funds materially in deficit** 

n/a 

## **Section G                    Declaration** 

**The trustees declare that they have approved the trustees’ report above.** 

**Signed on behalf of the charity’s trustees** 

**Signature(s)** APBell 

**Full name(s)** Alton P Bell **Position (eg Secretary, Chair,** Chair **etc)** 

**Date** 14/12/2023 

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