Search
Search results for '斗地主30元提现下载|-wn4.com|-幺地人五门蒋打发-w7p2c1-2023年2月7日22时6分36秒-rtjzvzxfr.com'
Filtered by type: 'blogs'
Displaying 11 - 20 of 21 in total
Why we’re calling for polluters to pay for the damage they cause
We all know the impacts of the climate crisis are getting worse. With wildfires, catastrophic floods and the first famine attributed solely to climate change, 2021 has been a terrifying parade of fossil-fuelled disasters. But what happens to the people on the receiving end of this loss and damage?
Why we’re calling for polluters to pay for the damage they cause
Building peace during a pandemic: nonviolent activism in Kenya
When the Covid-19 pandemic began, no one in Kenya thought it would reach us. In March 2020, we were all proven wrong when the first positive case was reported.
Building peace during a pandemic: nonviolent activism in Kenya
Exploring peace with local young people
Connecting with our local communities is a feature of the life of many Quaker meetings and groups, whether it's in our annual Quaker Week each October or with events throughout the year. In my work at Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) I'm particularly interested in how to better connect with children and families in the local community. This is also a long-term aim of Hertford & Hitchin Area Meeting's Peace Group. It has long been keen to engage local schools with Quaker peace education materials and share an approach that helps children develop the skills and understanding we need to be peacemakers in our lives.
Connecting with community
Why peace workshops are still worth it
In the 1990s I travelled across the Balkans, Northern Ireland and Western Europe facilitating sessions for peace. Despite the fragmentation of Eastern Europe and conflict in the former Yugoslavia it felt like peace was possible, and we could end the century with more peace than war. That isn't really how it has turned out, and this century has already witnessed wars thousands of us tried to prevent. We plod on for peace unbowed.
Why peace workshops are still worth it
INF treaty collapse: a call to disarm
The US government's recent decision to withdraw from the bilateral Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty is an ominous development. Russia responded by announcing that it will follow suit, further contributing to this dramatic erosion of global security.
INF treaty collapse: a call to disarm
Our faith, our work: a look back at 2017
I am continually inspired by the breadth, depth and conviction of Quakers' work. Across Britain meetings are taking action inspired by their faith, working to nurture and diversify their communities, and supporting Quaker work to make the world a better place.
A look back at 2017
Turning the Tide: a year of nonviolent campaigning in East Africa
The past year has been a huge one for Turning the Tide (TTT) in East Africa, with programmes in Kenya, Burundi and Rwanda reaching more people than ever before.
Turning the Tide: a year of nonviolent campaigning in East Africa
Climate justice: a cause for cautious optimism?
When it comes to asking governments to step up to taking action to tackle climate change it is often easy to feel doom and gloom. However, in recent months there has been cause for cautious optimism.
Climate justice – a cause for cautious optimism?
Finding patterns and examples in Edinburgh
The sun is streaming through the windows of the main meeting room at Central Edinburgh Meeting House. It is a cold and bright February morning and there is a buzz of excited conversation filling the room.
Finding patterns and examples in Edinburgh
Thousands of Quakers are divesting from fossil fuels
Quakers that attend local meetings are also members of regional collectives known as area meetings. Area meetings in Britain collectively manage millions of pounds of investments, and almost half of them now have zero investment in fossil fuels. More than 30 per cent have actively chosen to divest huge sums from the fossil fuel industry.
Thousands of British Quakers are divesting from fossil fuels