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Church of England body creates US$122 million fund aimed at ‘communities affected by slavery’
- Church Commissioners for England committed US$122 million over the next nine years to ‘a better and fairer future for all’
- Body was established in part with an endowment from Queen Anne’s Bounty, which invested ‘significant amounts’ into a company which traded African slaves
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A Church of England funding body on Tuesday apologised for its historic links to slavery, promising to address the wrongs of the past with investment in affected communities.
“The Church Commissioners is deeply sorry for its predecessor fund’s links with the transatlantic slave trade,” the organisation said in a statement.
The commissioners committed £100 million (US$122 million) of investment over the next nine years to “a better and fairer future for all”.
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The money will target “communities affected by historic slavery”, and towards further research about church links to the practice.

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the highest-ranking cleric in the Church of England and head of the worldwide Anglican communion, said he was “deeply sorry” for the links.
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