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Caritas Luxembourg (informally in Luxembourgish: Caritas Lëtzebuerg) [3] [4] [5] is the name of a range of nonprofit organisations operating in Luxembourg.They are grouped together under the umbrella of the Caritas Luxembourg Confederation (French: Confédération Caritas Luxembourg).
Caritas Luxembourg; L. Luxembourg Red Cross This page was last edited on 29 April 2024, at 09:44 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Caritas Hungary (Hungarian: Katolikus Karitász; Latin: Caritas Hungarica) is a not-for-profit social welfare organisation in Hungary. It is a service of the Catholic Church in Hungary . Caritas Hungary is a member of both the worldwide Caritas Internationalis confederation and its regional network Caritas Europa .
Caritas Social Action Network or CSAN is a British not-for-profit social welfare and social justice organisation. It is a service of the Catholic Church in England and Wales and a member of both Caritas Internationalis and Caritas Europa .
Caritas Spain, Caritas Poland, and Caritas Luxembourg engage in both domestic and international activities. Caritas Australia primarily operates as an international humanitarian and development actor abroad but also supports Indigenous Australians locally, [ 96 ] while Caritas Japan focuses mainly on domestic operations while financially ...
Caritas Monaco is a not-for-profit social welfare organisation in Monaco. It is a service of the Monégasque Catholic Church . Caritas Monaco is a member of both Caritas Europa and Caritas Internationalis and the smallest national Caritas organisation in the world.
The diocesan Caritas associations are organised on a decentralised basis, i.e. they are legally independent. They are subject to the diocesan structure within the Catholic Church. [7] Caritas Germany is the largest social employer in the country with around 695,000 employees, 80% of which are women, and several hundred thousand volunteers.
Caritas Norway was founded in 1952 as Norwegian Catholic Help for Refugees (Norsk katolsk flyktninghjelp) by the Catholic Church in Norway.In 1964, it became an independent organisation and adopted its current name, initially under the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oslo, and later under the Norwegian Catholic Bishops' Council (Norsk Katolsk Bisperåd).