Working
To Help Others
The Orange Order is deeply committed to helping those in
need.
Charitable giving is an essential part of Orangeism and it
is not insular. Certainly we have our own charities but we
have also raised large sums of money for various deserving
causes such as equipment for local hospitals, holidays for
disadvantaged children and "third-world" relief.
Of course we do not only give financially we also give of
our time and talents. It is central to our ethos that as part
of the community we provide a service to that community.
Annually the Order raises tens of thousands of pounds through
its collections at church parades and similar functions to
assist those in need.
Each year a specific cause is nominated for
the Grand Master's Charity
Appeal. 
In 2003 over £121,000 was raised for Cancer
Research NI, the largest single amount raised for the charity
in the United Kingdom at that time.

Our second Grand Master's Appeal raised £45,000
which was used to provide a community bus for the Grand Orange
Lodge of Togo in West Africa. This bus is widely used and
among those who have benefitted have been many villagers attending
eye clinics.
The Lord Enniskillen Memorial
Orange Orphan Society has a magnificent record for helping
boys and girls who have been deprived of the love and the
contribution of a parent, through death by natural causes
or as a result of continuing violence in Northern Ireland.
It is the best known Orange charity, but there are many others
such as the Sir George A.
Clark Bart Memorial Bursary Fund which assists people
through educational bursary.
The tradition of an Orange helping hand goes back for generations.
A perusal of the papers for the troubled period 1920-22 shows
special efforts by the Orange Order to help distressed Protestants,
including many from Eire, who had lost their homes because
of the terrible strife in the country at that time.
Again, during the Ulster troubles of the past 30 years, when
many families, especially in Belfast, were dispossessed and
had to move, the Order was prominent in alleviating hardship.
All this is well documented and is recognised by many members
of the general public.
Not so well publicised are the many efforts by Orangemen
and their Lodges in helping the local community and not in
any narrow parochial sense. District Lodges do considerable
work to raise funds for local charities and good causes, thorugh
collections, donations and fund-raising efforts.
One could list numerous examples of our work for charity
but it is sufficient to stress that charitable giving is happening
throughout Orange Lodges in Northern Ireland and the Republic
of Ireland on a daily basis.
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