Veteran marries at charity themed wedding
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An army veteran who suffered a life-changing brain injury married at themed wedding, to honour our charity which has played such a big part in his recovery.
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Help for Heroes is appalled by the attack in today's Mail on Sunday. We have referred this to our lawyers and this article is now subject to a legal complaint.
By recklessly attacking an organisation which supports and represents the brave men and women of our Armed Forces, the Mail on Sunday is effectively putting at risk those who have been injured in the service of our Country by jeopardising the vital support they may receive in the future.
The Mail on Sunday only informed us yesterday that they were planning to write an article about the charity and gave us only a few hours to respond. No evidence to substantiate the claims was provided and the Mail refused to give us a proper opportunity to reply.
We replied in as much detail as possible and told the paper that the claims were false and without foundation. The Mail on Sunday had clearly selected its headline and let sensationalism get in the way of fact.
The reality is the following:
H4H was launched in 2007 in response to a simple desire to support our wounded, injured and sick service personnel and their families. With the incredible support of the British public, H4H has been able to do precisely that since its launch, often in the face of inertia or even outright hostility from less informed quarters.
Far from losing our way, we have helped move care for British Service Personnel forward, working closely with over 60 specialist charity partners and as an active member of the Confederation of Service Charities (COBSEO).
We now have the world-leading Defence Recovery Capability, a unique partnership between the Ministry of Defence, The Royal British Legion and Help for Heroes. No other nation cares for its Service Personnel and Veterans in such a co-ordinated manner, linking the Services, the leading charities, the public and corporate support. Other countries, including the United States, now work with us to shape best practice of the future.
Tim Collins and Kevan Jones appear to be worryingly ill-informed of the facts and we will invite them to visit our Recovery Centres to help address this:
The Mail on Sunday has hurt not only our beneficiaries but also every member of our team. This is unacceptable and we are taking legal advice about redress.
We and our beneficiaries are all rightly proud of what Help for Heroes does and we are honoured to work alongside some extraordinary volunteers and staff - people who always go the extra mile to help ‘the Blokes’. One need only read any of the many letters we regularly receive to see the impact of the work of our teams.
It really is as simple as that.
Thank you to all our staff, volunteers, fundraisers and many partners.
We are rebuilding lives and that is vital work; we are privileged to be a part of it and it is an honour to work alongside you all.
Keep believing in what we do and keep smiling!
Onwards and Upwards
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An army veteran who suffered a life-changing brain injury married at themed wedding, to honour our charity which has played such a big part in his recovery.
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Cycle4Heroes, the brainchild of our biggest fundraiser, former Royal Engineers Sergeant Steve Craddock MBE, raised more than £4,000 when the peloton took to the Kent countryside.
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A former director has raised more than £3,000 for the Charity after cycling from Land’s End to John O’Groats.