The Valencia Mission reports expanded local volunteer activity—human rights learning, drug prevention and community resilience—based in the La Llum neighbourhood.

Annual review cites nearly 200 local volunteers supporting civic education, prevention outreach and flood recovery work in western Valencia. Activities combine introductory Scientology services with community assistance and practical ethics education led by volunteers in La Llum and surrounding districts.
VALENCIA, Spain – 15 January 2026 – A New Year 2026 annual review highlights community outreach led by the Church of Scientology Mission of Valencia in the La Llum (La Luz) district, describing a year of local initiatives that combined introductory religious services with volunteer-run civic education, prevention messaging, and practical community support.
The review describes a neighborhood environment where residents seek everyday solutions that strengthen social cohesion and help communities stay resilient under pressure. Within that setting, the Valencia Mission is presented as a venue for community support, volunteer organization, and local assistance delivered through consistent, on-the-ground participation.
Volunteer capacity is a central element of the report. The annual review describes “nearly 200 local volunteers” sustaining regular outreach in public areas and community settings across western Valencia. The work includes briefings, distribution of educational materials, and informal discussions focused on responsible conduct, respect for others, and constructive ways to reduce conflict and strengthen neighborhood trust.
Alongside outreach, the Mission provides Scientology services from introductory levels onward, including religious counseling and study. The review references the concept of “Clear,” which the Church of Scientology presents as a milestone within its spiritual counseling framework. The report describes this in a religious context as part of the Church’s pastoral practice.
The annual review also highlights education built around fundamental rights and responsibilities that support peaceful coexistence in diverse communities. Volunteer teams are using human-rights educational resources from Youth for Human Rights designed for practical, day-to-day understanding, with an emphasis on tolerance, mutual respect, and non-violent conflict resolution. Local volunteers describe a focus on both residents and visitors, reflecting Valencia’s constant movement through neighborhoods, markets, and public spaces.
A second element described in the review is the distribution and discussion of The Way to Happiness, a secular moral code written by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. Structured around 21 precepts, the booklet addresses themes of personal integrity, responsibility, and respect for others. Organizers describe it as a simple, non-political tool used in neighborhood settings, particularly where communities want positive standards of behavior without confrontation.
Prevention education is cited as a continuing focus across the year. The review describes volunteers providing information intended to support informed decision-making, especially for young people and families. Organizers describe the approach as practical and factual: offering understandable materials suitable for quick conversations in public places and appropriate for community distribution.
The review further references volunteer mobilization during severe flooding that affected parts of eastern Spain in late 2024. It describes Scientology Volunteer Ministers contributing practical help during response and recovery, including support with cleanup tasks, assistance to residents, and coordination of neighborhood-level logistics. The report emphasizes calm, orderly volunteer action that can be sustained over time as communities move from immediate response into longer recovery.
Ivan Arjona, a Scientology representative for European institutional relations, said the Valencia account reflects a wider civic principle of neighborhood responsibility.
“Across Europe, communities are strongest when citizens translate shared values – human dignity, solidarity, and responsibility – into practical action,” said Ivan Arjona. “What stands out in Valencia is the combination of education, prevention, and volunteer service operating in a local setting and doing so in ways that support the common good.”
Scientology is a contemporary religion founded by L. Ron Hubbard. Alongside ecclesiastical services, Scientology churches and missions often report volunteer-delivered community initiatives centered on ethics, education, and prevention. In Valencia, the New Year 2026 review describes a model based on sustained local volunteer participation, consistent neighborhood outreach, and a focus on civic resilience.
Scientology and its social programmes
Scientology is a contemporary religion founded by Mr. L. Ron Hubbard and currently steadily led by Mr. David Miscavige. Alongside its ecclesiastical services, the Church sponsors a number of social education programs—among them human rights awareness, drug prevention, and community ethics materials—often delivered locally by volunteers. The Volunteer Minister program is presented by the Church as a form of trained community response, providing practical assistance and what is described as “spiritual first aid” during crises.
In Valencia, the local model relies on sustained volunteer capacity—described in the New Year’s review as “nearly 200 volunteers” plus the 300 during the DANA response—and on regular outreach in public areas and community settings, with an emphasis on prevention education and civic resilience.
The Church of Scientology, its churches, missions, groups, and members are present across the European continent, supporting initiatives in education, prevention, and community betterment. The Church’s legal status and recognition continue to grow, with court and administrative decisions in a number of jurisdictions recognizing Scientology as a religion, including by the European Court of Human Rights.
Media Contact
Organization: European Office Church of Scientology for Public Affairs and Human Rights
Contact Person: Ivan Arjona
Website: https://www.scientologyeurope.org
Email: Send Email
Address:Boulevard de Waterloo 103
City: Brussels
State: Brussels
Country:Belgium
Release id:40206
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