Europe and MENA 2025 Impact Report

Discover what God has been doing in the region through Alpha

A note from the Executive Director


In 2025, our national and global teams came together to deliver the new Alpha Youth Series in more countries – faster than ever before. We don’t know how long the Open Generation will remain ‘open’, so the task before us is both urgent and important. In just one year, the new series reached over 20 countries in 17 European languages, giving virtually every teenager there the opportunity to encounter Jesus in their own heart language, culture and context.

We also saw partnerships take us further than ever before, including to Central Asia – to the ‘Stans’ of the former USSR – where we equipped more than 1,000 young leaders to run Alpha Youth.

We gathered faithful, talented staff and volunteer leaders who came ready to learn, grow and lead. Best practices were implemented, prayer fuelled the work, and a new generation of younger leaders emerged. And God gave the growth: 40% more teenagers encountered Jesus this year! Still, we pray and long for more. It’s remarkable what God can do with a little. With your support, He multiplied.

Below, you’ll find inspiring stories of those who have gone faster, further, and faithfully to share the Good News of Jesus in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.

But there is so much more to be done, so many more people in our region searching for hope, purpose and meaning. In 2028, our aim is to reach one million people across 70 nations through Alpha. Now is the time to accelerate and scale up.

As we enter a season of unparalleled opportunity, with your support we will plan, pray and work to expand our capacity, strengthen our capabilities and deepen our partnerships so that the mission continues to multiply.

We celebrate the growth we experienced in 2025 and the nearly 365,000 people who explored faith through Alpha in 65 nations, from Dublin to Düsseldorf to Dubai.

May Christ be glorified and known again across Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, by everyone, everywhere, in the coming years.

Every blessing,


2025 impact in numbers




Building an Alpha Youth movement



In 2025, Charlie Crump was appointed as Head of Youth for Europe, strengthening our capacity to support national teams, equip leaders, and sustain the rapid growth of Alpha Youth across the region.

Alpha Youth featured prominently in the Catholic Church’s Jubilee Year of Hope events (see Catholic section), the Pentecostal World Conference (Finland), at Exponential Europe (Berlin) and at Explo Conference (Switzerland) – enabling thousands to encounter the new series.

“Alpha Youth in 2025 feels like a movement – not because of our programmes but because young people are inviting their friends and discovering faith together.”

– Charlie Crump

The new series was launched in 17 EMENA languages in churches, halls and cinemas, online and at conferences, camps and festivals. Many launch events featured live Alpha Youth sessions, young people sharing their testimonies and panel discussions about empowering young people to share their faith.

By the end of 2025, the new series was available in the following languages (ranked by the number of native speakers in Europe):

Russian

The Russian launch took place in Kazakhstan, to an enthusiastic audience of 1,500 young people from 350 churches in Central Asia and leaders from across the Russian-speaking world.

This single launch has already triggered widespread, cross-border adoption, with Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Russia reporting significant increases in Alpha Youth courses.

French and German

Teams in Austria, France, Germany and Switzerland took the new Alpha Youth Series on tour, hosting launch events in multiple cities and regions.

Hundreds of leaders spanning a wide range of cultural and denominational contexts were reached. Each country has since reported significant increases in Alpha Youth courses.

Albanian

The new series was officially launched during a youth camp in summer, with 140 teenagers and leaders experiencing it together. “I can’t stop thinking about that beautiful experience,” one young guest wrote afterwards.

One church with hardly any young members reports that the new series has led to many teenagers signing up for Alpha Youth and becoming active church members.


Kempes, 19, shared his testimony at the launch of the new Alpha Youth Series in Madrid.

Nordics

More than 1,000 Alpha Youth courses for teenagers were run in Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark, the vast majority benefitting from the new series – a testament to cross-denominational unity and a shared vision for reaching young people.

Austria

Following the October launch of the new Alpha Youth Series, 86 Alpha Youth courses were run in a single term – nearly matching all of 2024’s Alpha Youth courses. Youth courses in Austria almost doubled, from 88 in 2024 to 169.

Spain

In the first eight months of 2025, Spain ran 178 Alpha Youth courses. But once the new Alpha Youth Series was launched in Spanish, momentum accelerated and a further 189 Alpha Youth courses were run in the final four months of the year – evidence of its powerful catalytic effect. 



After years of challenges, a church in Lausanne decided to run the new Alpha Youth Series (in French). The 30 young people who initially signed up enjoyed it so much that they invited their friends, and the group soon doubled to 60.

“Atheists and Muslims came along…some now attend church and ask for prayer, though they’re not yet Christians,” shares the pastor.

The impact reached across generations, with elderly members cooking meals for the youth.



2025 was a year of deepening partnership with the Catholic Church. The Jubilee of Hope provided unprecedented opportunities to introduce Alpha to huge audiences of Catholic leaders and believers gathered in Rome from across the world.

Thousands of priests and parish leaders from across the world attended webinars co-hosted by Alpha and Divine Renovation – a Catholic ministry focused on parish renewal.

And more and more parishes across EMENA ran Alpha, resulting in a record-breaking 132,000+ people exploring faith through Alpha in Catholic churches and organisations – more than a third of all EMENA participants.

Catholic churches are increasingly seeing Alpha as an effective way to engage young people. In 2025, half of all Alpha courses in Catholic churches were for youth or young adults.




– Zoé, 18, found faith, meaning and
community when she did Alpha Youth in
a Catholic church in France


– Father Higor

Sant’Agata Church in Caltanissetta, Sicily, was on the brink of closure. Hardly anyone attended Mass any more, and the church building itself was falling into disrepair. Five women began praying regularly, asking God to send a priest or community who would help turn the situation around.

That’s when Father Higor, a priest from Brazil, was sent to Sant’Agata, along with other brothers from his community. “We found an empty church, without hope, without joy,” he says. “We had to find other ways to bring in people who would never come to Mass. So we started Alpha.”

Watch the video below to see how Alpha helped Sant’Agata Church to become a thriving community of faith and mission, including a 200-strong youth ministry involved in reaching out to people with addictions, visiting the sick and running Alpha.


Throughout 2025, Alpha participated in various Jubilee events in Rome, significantly raising Alpha’s profile. From Nicky Gumbel’s closing address at the International Catholic Communications Forum, to the Jubilee of Teenagers and the Jubilee of Youth, when thousands of young people, priests and nuns experienced the hospitality and joy of Alpha, the Jubilee of Hope enabled Alpha to plant seeds which will bear fruit in years to come.

Thousands of young people visited the Alpha stand in Rome’s Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere during the Jubilee of Youth, playing games, making friends and experiencing the new Alpha Youth Series in nearby San Callisto Church
Watching the new Alpha Youth Series in San Callisto Church
Some of the hard-working Alpha Italy team members
A nun joins in the fun at the Alpha stand at the Jubilee of Teenagers

In addition to strong growth in our established European market, 2025 brought encouraging momentum in our two emerging regions: Eurasia and MENA. Amidst conflict and complexity, Alpha began to take root here in fresh ways, underpinned by strengthened regional support, staff in more countries and more resources in local languages.  

Eurasia

Spanning the Balkans, Eastern Europe, Central Asia and Russia, Eurasia is a vast region with a mix of languages, denominations and contexts – from Orthodox-majority nations to Muslim-majority countries where Christians are a small minority.

Conflict has long shaped Eurasia’s history, and the current war in Ukraine continues to impact churches, communities and families in Ukraine and neighbouring countries.

To provide a more robust structure for this growing work, in 2025 Eurasia Director Stanisław Cinal was joined by two new members of staff: Sebastian Zapała, Operations Director, and Jessica Choong, Programme Director.




The launch of the new Alpha Youth Series in Russian in Kazakhstan was a catalytic moment for Alpha in Central Asia. Held during the SOZO youth conference in August, it introduced Alpha to an excited audience of more than 1,500 young people and leaders from 350 churches across Central Asia.

Considerable growth in Alpha’s ministry was reported in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan – a trend set to continue with the appointment of four part-time co-ordinators serving those nations and Tajikistan. 


Alpha continued to grow its ministry in the Balkans and is now active in six of the eight countries: Albania, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Greece, North Macedonia and Serbia

The new Alpha Youth Series was launched in two Balkans languages – Albanian and Serbian – sparking new youth courses in Albania, Serbia and Bosnia.

The work in Albania dramatically expanded with the establishment of a local team and the launch of the new Alpha Youth Series in Albanian. Nearly 400 people in Albania explored faith through Alpha on 36 courses run by 29 churches.

The Alphabet of Faith* – developed in 2024 by Alpha Bulgaria with support from the local Orthodox church – gained wider acceptance among churches in Bulgaria, opening up opportunities for Alpha’s ministry in Orthodox-majority contexts. Bishop Sionji, Abbot of the Holy Bachkovo Monastery in Bulgaria, described it as “a symbol of spiritual progress”, which “can help many people who are seeking God.”

*The Alphabet of Faith is a book containing the scripts of the Alpha course live talks, contextualised for Orthodox audiences. It’s available in Bulgarian, English, Greek and Ukrainian, with translation underway in North Macedonian, Russian and Serbian.







In the gleaming cities and cultural melting pot of the Gulf, Alpha’s ministry hit a new milestone, reaching more than 10,000 participants for the first time – up 16% from 2024.

The most striking growth happened among young people, with youth courses up 76%, enabling 1,810 teenagers to do Alpha – three times more than in 2024.


In 2025, the number of Levant churches running Alpha rose by 56%, with courses up 25%, enabling nearly 3,000 people in the region to do Alpha. Much of the growth came from Alpha Youth, partly fuelled by the translation of the Alpha Youth Series 2.0 into Arabic in the first half of 2025.

Throughout the year, small staff teams in Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey worked to build relationships with churches of different denominations – including some of the oldest in the world – introducing them to Alpha and offering training and support.




Around half the population of North Africa is under 25, so it’s not surprising that youth and young adult courses accounted for 91% of all Alpha courses here in 2025. More than 4,300 young people in this region explored faith through Alpha.


Bringing hope to EMENA’s prisons

3,294 prisoners in 22 countries encountered Jesus
through 167 Alpha courses in 2025

↑ from 2,935 prisoners in 15 countries on 124 courses in 2023


– Krzysztof, a former prisoner who now runs Alpha in prisons and detention centres

Top 3 countries
(by Alpha prison courses)


Latvia

Alpha was run in the majority of Latvia’s prisons in 2025. Six out of the country’s nine prisons had Alpha courses, with 192 inmates participating.



– Joanna rediscovered faith through Alpha and now helps run Alpha in a women’s prison

Mobilising the church

When asked by a prison director in Poland whether Alpha’s prison ministry really makes a difference, a parish priest who also serves as a prison chaplain had a very clear answer:

Not only is it transforming the lives of prisoners but it is also fanning the flames of faith in his church, with members of his congregation eager to play their part. They spiritually adopt the prisoners on Alpha, praying for them by name each week and doing practical things to show their love, such as baking them cakes.

“Alpha’s prison ministry is not only helping to transform the lives of prisoners but plays its part in revitalising the church, too.”
– Stanisław Cinal, EMENA prison ministry lead

More than 42,000 people across EMENA took part in Alpha’s family courses in 2025, with over 37,000 doing The Marriage Course and around 5,000 joining The Parenting Course.

The Parenting Course is currently being updated and a brand new resource is planned for release in 2027.

The suite of family courses comprises:

  • The Marriage Course
  • The Pre-Marriage Course
  • The Parenting Children Course
  • The Parenting Teenagers Course

“Marriage and parenting courses impact society in three ways: they turn the tide of family breakdown; they prepare a new generation; and they draw people closer to Jesus.”
Willem van de Poll, EMENA Marriage & Parenting Courses Coordinator



In the Levant, Alpha’s family courses grew 43%, driven especially by Iraq, Israel and Lebanon, with participants more than doubling to over 1,000.

In Iraq, thanks to a partnership with SOS International, The Marriage Course was up from two in 2024 to nine in 2025, with 176 participants. One Orthodox priest from the Nineveh Plains region described The Marriage Course as “relevant to the challenges of daily married life,” and noted the “remarkable positive engagement” of the participants in his church.

The Marriage Course underway in Alkosh, Nineveh Plans, Iraq

In Kazakhstan, which has a very high divorce rate, Alpha’s family courses are growing in popularity. In 2025, there were 16 Marriage Courses reported, attended by 221 participants, and 42 parents participated in three Parenting Courses.

“We have exactly what society needs – family courses,” comments Kazakhstan’s Alpha coordinator. “There are church leaders whose hearts ache for families and want to help – so when they hear about these courses, they want to launch them in their churches.”


Family courses in Spain continued their rapid rise, growing 15% in 2025 (from 201 to 232 courses) and multiplying 10-fold since 2016.

This growth is due to the availability of all resources in Spanish, strong networking, and online/ hybrid options.

Many church leaders who participated in The Marriage Course Experience – a version of the course adapted especially for pastor couples – went on to run The Marriage Course in their churches.

Paola and David had such a positive experience of The Marriage Course that they now volunteer as coordinators of both The Marriage Course and The Parenting Course in Spain.

Watch the video below of Paola & David sharing about their experience on The Marriage Course.

(You can view it with subtitles/CC in your language by clicking settings – Spanish (auto-generated) – Auto-translate, and then selecting the required language.)


Building capacity in our National Alpha Offices (NAOs) remained a key priority in 2025, with teams gathering in regional cohorts to continue their leadership and strategy development journeys.   

Led by Arnoud Drop, Global Director of Leadership Development (and former Alpha Netherlands National Director), the cohorts emphasise practical stewardship, using the ‘Build, Measure, Learn’ approach to problem-solving.

The third Eurasia cohort underway in March 2025

The impact is already visible – fresh ideas, improved strategic thinking and NAOs sharing learnings with each other.

The cohorts have also become a much-cherished moment of prayer, fellowship and encouragement for NAOs, some of whom work in particularly difficult circumstances.


Anna Pęcak had only just joined the team as National Director when she attended the first meeting of the Eurasia leadership and strategy development cohort in March 2024. “It helped me really understand and experience what Alpha is about – its values, its DNA,” she says. “That’s what happens when you get to meet and pray and work with people organising Alpha in such different contexts and denominations.”

At the end of 2025, with the Eurasia cohort three-quarters of the way through their development journey, Anna says that the format of the meetings (around 20% teaching and the rest team working) has had a tangible impact on how she and her team work, bringing them greater clarity, confidence and momentum.

“The cohorts have helped us to clearly define our goal, be passionate about it and be able to explain it to others. This has helped in so many aspects of our work, and especially as we engage with churches and donors.”
– Anna Pęcak


“A goal requires strategies, but the dream also requires a culture of innovation, bowing our knees, seeing where God is on the move and moving with him – like a sailboat ready to catch the wind.”
– Arnoud Drop

When Arnoud took the helm of Alpha Netherlands in 2014, under 15,000 people were doing Alpha each year, and the small, ministry-focused team was increasingly busy as the ministry expanded. In 2025, with the number of annual Alpha participants surpassing 30,000 for the first time, Alpha Netherlands is on track to achieve its goal of reaching one million people by 2036.

Click here to read Arnoud’s reflection on this season of growth, including how a passage in Ezekiel inspired this bold dream.

“I inherited a beautiful organisation, which was already well known,” says Arnoud Drop, who worked in banking and volunteered for Alpha for years before taking the helm in 2014.

Passionate about Alpha’s mission and seeing huge potential for growth, Arnoud began a two-year project to build Alpha Netherlands into a healthier, more sustainable organisation. “We needed to prepare for the growth that was already happening and which we believed would keep increasing,” he explains.

Major donors

A three-year investment by a major donor enabled the strengthening of church engagement and communications capacity. It was the start of a more intentional engagement with major donors to help fund new initiatives while also expanding the flow of regular donations from smaller donors for long-term sustainability.

Shifts in the board’s posture, from operational involvement to strategic oversight, also empowered Arnoud and his leadership team to drive the mission with greater clarity and momentum.

A pivotal moment was Alpha Netherlands’ 20th anniversary in 2016. “We gave thanks for the 250,000 people reached through Alpha and spent a lot of time in prayer, asking God to guide our plans for the next 20 years,” Arnoud recalls.

A daring dream

Inspired by Ezekiel 47:1-12, the team came up with a daring dream: one million people hearing the Gospel of Jesus through Alpha by 2036. Nearly a decade in, Alpha Netherlands has reached 400,000 people, with growth on track to make the dream a reality.

“A goal requires strategies but the dream also requires a culture of innovation, bowing our knees, seeing where God is on the move and moving with him – like a sailboat ready to catch the wind,” Arnoud notes. “Since 2016, there have been some game changers: the first Alpha Film Series, Divine Renovation, and, more recently, the ‘quiet revival’ among young people.”

Sharing

Throughout this season, Alpha Netherlands has continued its longstanding commitment to give away 10% of its income to develop Alpha’s work internationally. “Sharing is part of our DNA as Alpha,” Arnoud says simply. This has included supporting national offices to shape their own dreams and build the teams and strategies to pursue them.

As Arnoud moves into a new role with Alpha International* in March 2026, Dorine Sommers, the new National Director, is looking forward to the next chapter. “We clearly see God at work in our country, and I consider it a privilege to work with Him in the evangelisation of the Netherlands, the revitalisation of the church and the transformation of society,” she says.

* In March 2026, Arnoud will become Alpha’s Global Director of Leadership Development and EMENA Deputy Executive Director, overseeing the region’s leadership and NAO development.


In 2025, we continued to strengthen our collaboration with like-minded ministries and church networks to ensure that everyone, everywhere has the chance to hear the Gospel through Alpha by 2033. This work was spearheaded by Arnd Herrmann, Director of Strategic Partnerships.

Below is a glimpse of just a few partnership initiatives that are bearing fruit.


One of the most promising partnerships is with John Maxwell’s Beyond Success programme, which is helping unchurched professionals explore personal growth and leadership. It includes an evangelism element and points participants to Alpha to explore faith.

In Romania, this partnership has seen remarkable results over the past few years:

  • 60-70% of unchurched Beyond Success participants went on to do Alpha
  • Following a joint campaign last year, around 2,000 people from the programme did Alpha
  • Around 50 churches run Alpha due to this partnership

This approach is now being replicated across several National Alpha Offices.


Through a new pilot initiative with Biblica, thousands of Arabic and Ukrainian speakers reading Scripture on the Biblica app are now being offered a clear next step: signing up for an Alpha course to explore faith more deeply.

Dynamic Church Planters International (DCPI) is in the process of integrating Alpha into its European church-planting strategy. This means that new church plants are being encouraged to use Alpha from the outset, providing them with a free, high quality, simple-to-use tool to reach out to the community.



Missional International Church Network (MICN) is rolling Alpha out globally, with powerful testimonies of expatriates coming to faith in their own languages. One example is a church in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where Russian-speakers are using Alpha to reach out to other Russian speakers in the city and beyond.




Our partnership with Youth For Christ strengthened across the region, with more local teams collaborating to launch the new Alpha Youth Series. This has helped Alpha to reach many more young people with the Good News.


References: Hebrews 7:25; Matthew 28:30; Ephesians 5:18 (AMP)

Nabil leading a prayer workshop during the MENA cohort in December 2025