Search
Search results for '注册送18元体验金没了→→1946.cc←←注册送18元体验金没了.gmhy'
Filtered by type: 'blogs'
Displaying 1 - 10 of 12 in total
Quakers at uni: how I found my faith
As a fiercely independent 19-year-old, I decided that I would catch the train to York for my first week at university. Leaving my family on the doorstep at home, I remember proudly arriving at my halls of residence with a sleeping bag, a few tea bags and, while being excited, a general fear of the unknown that lay ahead of me.
Quakers at uni: how I found my faith
Shaping our future: children and young people at Yearly Meeting 2018
When I first started working for Quakers in Britain, one of the things I found most impressive was the way children and young people are enabled to take part in the biggest decisions.
Shaping our future: children and young people at Yearly Meeting 2018
Support the right to family life
On 16 March, MPs will debate the rules on family reunion for refugees. Currently unaccompanied child refugees cannot sponsor their parents to come to the UK. Adult refugees may be joined by a partner and dependent children under 18 years of age.
Support the right to family life
Think global, act local
Does your council pay the Living Wage? Make decisions about fracking? Support refugees? What does your council do to address inequality locally? These are all issues that Quakers care about and local councils influence how these issues are addressed.
Think global, act local
Why we must talk about conscientious objection
For many people, it seems obvious that human beings should have the right to refuse to kill. Yet we must be able to explain our choices of conscientious objection; it is an age-old discussion that continues throughout each generation.
Why we must talk about conscientious objection
Are Sundays more sacred?
“Now there were many old people who went into the chapel and looked out at the windows, thinking it a strange thing to see a man preach on a hill, and not in their church, as they called it; whereupon I was moved to open to the people that the steeple-house, and the ground whereon it stood were no more holy than that mountain…" (George Fox, Firbank Fell, 1694)
Are Sundays more sacred?
A Quaker climate striker talks campaigning through lockdown
"Although we're unable to meet on the streets, our campaigning for climate justice must not and has not stopped," says Anya Nanning Ramamurthy, an 18-year-old Quaker who worships at Tottenham Meeting.
A Quaker climate striker talks campaigning through lockdown
What's wrong with the Armed Forces Bill?
The UK, out-of-step with the rest of NATO, the UN Security Council and Europe, recruits people at 16. The Armed Forces Bill is our best opportunity to raise the UK's minimum recruitment age to 18 in law, a longstanding Quaker concern.
What's wrong with the Armed Forces Bill?
Our shared world won't wait
When talking to students about COP26, I'll have to tell them honestly that, while I don't fully understand the deal, it feels like a disappointment for supporters of climate justice. Prioritising optics over action, rich countries trumpeted their alarm, but enabled more pollution with impunity at the expense of the world's poorest people.
Our shared world won't wait
A youthful Yearly Meeting
Children and young people are a vital part of Yearly Meeting. They gather to look at its themes in age-appropriate ways, build community, explore Quaker faith and practice, experience worship and prayerful decision-making, and of course have lots of fun in a safe space.
A youthful Yearly Meeting