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Jobs and voluntary opportunities

Jobs

Updated 29 January 2025

Britain Yearly Meeting employs staff to carry out the centrally managed work of Quakers in Britain. We aim to be an ethical employer, with a 1:4 ratio between our highest and our lowest paid staff. Britain Yearly Meeting is a Living Wage employer. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES EDI VISION STATEMENT

Quakers in Britain: Job opportunities

Meeting for Sufferings

Working with Meeting for Sufferings

Updated 23 September 2025

The Meeting for Sufferings agenda is planned by Meeting for Sufferings Arrangements Group, usually about a month before each meeting. This guidance on process and timing aims to help ensure that Meeting for Sufferings can deal with minutes effectively.

Our values

Truth

Updated 10 May 2024

When Quakers gather in worship, we seek to connect with God and with each other. We try to shed our biases and self-interest and seek a deep truth.

Meeting for Sufferings

Papers and minutes

Updated 17 December 2025

This page contains papers for the next meeting. It also provides links to minutes and papers for recent meetings.

Meeting for Sufferings papers and minutes

Our history

Quakers and Kindertransport

Updated 20 March 2024

The Germany Emergency Committee of the Religious Society of Friends was set up in 1933, shortly after Hitler came to power. This committee, alongside other groups, was responsible for helping Jewish children escape Nazi persecution in Germany, Czechoslovakia, Austria and Poland. It then supported them in the countries to which they had fled. This is known as the Kindertransport.

Quakers and the Kindertransport

Other Quaker groups

Other Quaker organisation

Updated 25 October 2024

This page is the most regularly updated list of groups and meetings that don't fall under area and local meetings.

Other Quaker organisation

Patterns and examples

Managing listed buildings – help!

Updated 1 October 2019

Our area meeting has ten meeting houses, including seven listed buildings. Most of them are in town or city centres and have 20–30 regular attenders. Almost all of the meeting houses generate income from room hire and act as community hubs. Between 20–80 groups use each building.

Managing listed buildings – help!

Privacy notice

Cookies

Updated 28 August 2020

How are cookies used on www.quaker.org.uk?

Cookies

Yearly Meeting 2026

Programme

Updated 15 December 2025

Yearly Meeting Programme