People across Bath and North East Somerset whose loved ones have died during the Coronavirus pandemic are being invited to join an online community service of remembrance.

The Community Remembering Together Service will be broadcast on Wednesday, 24th March at 7 pm via the Bath Abbey YouTube channel.

The event is organised jointly by the Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust, Dorothy House Hospice Care, Bath Abbey, SWALLOW Charity and Bath and North East Somerset Council.

RUH Lead Chaplain, the Reverend Narinder Tegally, said: “The service is intended to bring together those within the local community who follow a professed faith or no faith, to remember all those who have died across Bath and North East Somerset, Wiltshire and Somerset at the RUH, at Dorothy House, in our local care homes and at home since the virus first arrived last year.

“As places of worship are currently closed for communal acts of devotion, the service will be pre-recorded and offered online. Not only is this an opportunity for people to remember those who have died during the Covid-19 pandemic, it is also a way for the wider community to be together, to grieve together and support all in the local community who have had their lives significantly changed by it.”

The Community Remembering Together Service will include:

• An address by The Rt Revd Ruth Worsley, Bishop of Taunton

• Personal stories from two bereaved families

• Reading from Wayne De Leeuw, CEO of Dorothy House Hospice Care

• Prayers, readings and poetry offered from different faith traditions and none.

• During this service, people will be invited to light a candle at home

• Music by the RUH musician in residence, and Christchurch and Bath Abbey Choirs

• Closing words from Cara Charles Barks MBE, CEO of the RUH Bath

• Song by SWALLOW – South West Action for Learning and Living Our Way Supporting people with learning disabilities.

The Rt Revd Ruth Worsley, Bishop of Taunton, said: “This time last year we’d only just heard of Covid-19. Now, a year on, it’s totally turned our lives upside down, taking away so many things we’d previously taken for granted, but above all, taking away many people who are dear to us and our communities. It’s been made so much more difficult by us not being able to have proper funeral services.

“So many people have not been able to gather together with family and friends to say goodbye as they would have wished. Our hope is that the Remembering Together Service will provide some of that solace and sharing in loss that is part of bereavement.”

Imam Dr Mohammed Gamal Abdelnour, Imam of Bath Mosque, said: “Offering condolences and sharing in grief with the family and friends of the deceased are considered valued acts of charity in Islam. However, Coronavirus has largely changed the way we grieve, the way we honour the demise of our loved ones, and also the way we express our condolences. All these manifestations doubled our grief and added salt to our wounds.

“Believing in God’s ultimate mercy and mysterious wisdom, I pray that the Remembering Together Service will help heal our griefs and revitalise the sense of togetherness that we have missed since the virus began.”

Cllr Dine Romero, Leader of Bath & North East Somerset Council, said: “As we approach the first anniversary since the first death from Coronavirus in the UK, it is only fitting that we should come