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Yearly Meeting Update December 2025
How we hold Yearly Meeting (YM) sessions will be changing in 2026. Below is some information about the agenda for the next Yearly Meeting in May 2026.
Yearly Meeting Update December 2025
First Single Day Yearly Meeting Session – Manchester, 18 July 2026
The first single day Yearly Meeting session is taking place on Saturday 18 July in Manchester – and you are invited.
First Single Day Yearly Meeting Session – Manchester, 18 July 2026
Enslavement - the 'gravest crime against humanity'
Quakers on the Trustees' Reparations Working Group have welcomed a landmark United Nations resolution acknowledging historic enslavement as the 'gravest crime against humanity.'
Enslavement - the ‘gravest crime against humanity.’
Young Quakers breathe life into their beliefs
More than three hundred young Quakers have contributed to a book summing up how they see Quakerism. Called Living our beliefs, it is available from the Quaker Centre Bookshop and as an ebook at www.yqspace.org.uk/living-our-beliefs. Playlists, video clips and line drawings accompany inspirational quotations and short passages.
Young Quakers breathing life into their beliefs
Seeking the truth about Trident
Quakers in Britain in association with Luath Press have published “The Truth about Trident: Disarming the Nuclear Argument". With more than 15,000 nuclear warheads stockpiled worldwide, Timmon Wallis explores the arguments for retaining Trident with a critical eye to get to the real truth.Timmon Wallis works for Quaker Peace and Social Witness and Christian CND.
Seeking the truth about Trident
Quakers join crucial lobby on Trident
Quakers around Britain are lobbying their Members of Parliament today ahead of a crucial vote on 18 July on whether to replace all four Trident submarines, which carry the UK's nuclear weapons system.
Quakers join crucial lobby on Trident
Quakers save lives, not take lives
This week Quakers are marking the anniversary of the devastation wrought on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by World War II nuclear bombs. One hundred years ago Quakers were on a different battlefield, among courageous conscientious objectors rescuing the dying and wounded at the Somme, one of the bloodiest battles in World War I.
Quakers save lives, not take lives
Breaking the cycle of violence
Beekeepers and market gardeners, university lecturers, teachers and men who left school aged twelve, doctors, printers and politicians, were conscientious objectors (COs) in World War I (WWI). Their courage – and the global plight of COs today – has inspired an art exhibition in London, set in a chamber resembling a WWI field tent made of bandages.
Breaking the cycle of violence
Army increases recruitment of minors
New figures out this week show that 24 per cent of British Army recruits are child soldiers. This is despite public opposition from Quakers and many others who are campaigning to raise the age of enlistment.
Army increases recruitment of minors
Storytelling in stitches
The famous Quaker Tapestry is a modern stitched masterpiece in storytelling. Part of it is being exhibited in Friends House in London. It was last in the capital over 20 years ago.
Storytelling in stitches