Will the bells ring out loud during King Charles’ coronation or will there be complete silence in the UK? As it stands now, this seems to be becoming a reality again. There are at least 8,000 short whistleblowers and the campaign to recruit more volunteers is not going smoothly.
With the slogan “Ring for the King”, the Central Church Bell Board hopes to attract more new ringers. But the call has not yet paid off. According to the British channel Sky News Only 1,500 new registrations had been received in about six months, while at least 8,000 new volunteers were still needed to ring the 38,000 church bells across the country during Charles III’s coronation on 6 May.
Little time to train new communicators
Therefore, the Central Council of Church Bells is concerned that there will not be enough time to train enough new bell ringers in the next seven weeks. “It will be too much for them unless they have a lot of free time,” says Vicki Chapman of the Bell Rangers Church Central Council.
You don’t just become a whistleblower, you can read on the website of the Central Board of Church Bell Ringers. The first lesson package alone takes about 10 to 15 hours.
Volunteers receive weekly lessons
New whistleblowers first learn how to use the buzzer, which requires specific technique, according to the association. Therefore, beginners should first start with a muffled bell. Those who mastered it could ring another bell and then take weekly lessons until the day of Charles’ coronation.
So Chapman suspected that many experienced informants had to travel from church to church. This way bells can be rung everywhere.
A man sends bailiffs to the airport to demand compensation
Did you see an error? Email us. We are grateful.
Reply to the article:
Ring for the king or not? Thousands of whistleblowers less than Charles’ coronation