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About CruseHow Cruse Started We are frequently asked "How did Cruse begin and why was there a need for your service". Cruse was founded in 1959 by Margaret Torrie, a social worker and wife of leading consultant psychiatrist, Dr. Alfred Torrie. Realising that there was very little support for widows, she placed an advert in a local paper offering to form a group for young widows. An immediate response from 26 widows made her realise how right she was to form this group. From, in her own words, "initial suspicion and hesitation on the part of those who came", Cruse is today the largest Bereavement Counselling Charity in the world. Cruse was officially founded on 5th October 1959 and for 16 years was run from Mrs. Torrie's home, The Charter House, Lion Gate Gardens, Richmond.
What name should be used for this new group?
After some thought, the idea of "Cruse" was adopted from the story in the Old Testament about a widow who shared her last jar of oil (a cruse is an earthenware vessel for holding oil) with a stranger, and by sharing found she always had more. The stranger was the Hebrew prophet, Elijah (1 Kings, Ch 17).
How the Cruse Organisation Developed
The Cruse service was extended to widowers in 1980, officially providing a service which many branches had already begun.
Extending the Service to All Bereaved People
How Cruse Operates in the year 2000
Cruse Bereavement Care is the largest organisation of its kind in the world
Cruse Bereavement Care continues to exist because there is a constant need for information on death and bereavement; a need for someone to listen when the grieving person needs to talk; a need for a safe place where feelings can be expressed; a need for assurance that what is going on is all part of grieving.
Many thousands of bereaved people receive face to face counselling free of charge and the opportunity for social support through Cruse Bereavement Care branches.
People can telephone or write to the Welfare Advisor for information and advice on practical issues relating to bereavement.
More than 100 books, booklets and pamphlets specifically for the bereaved and those who help them are available from the Cruse Bereavement Care mail order service. Publiciations for bereaved people include books about grief and recovery from loss, poetry books, practical information fact sheets, and fiction for children and adolescents. Resources for professionals are also available, including training manuals.
Cruse Bereavement Care offers external training for those whose work brings them into contact with the bereaved such as, nurses, doctors, clergy, welfare and personnel staff, funeral directors, life assurance representatives and many other professionals.
Cruse also provides national and local training courses for bereavement counsellors and individually arranged training programmes for firms and organisations.
We also have close links with other bereavement groups, statutory and voluntary organistions and work with Government departments on health and social issues which relate to bereaved people.
Cruse Bereavement Care is a national charity dependent on voluntary contributions. So that we can continue offering a totally free counselling service to those who suffer the heartache and loss that bereavement brings, we need your help.
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