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Quakers join National Day of Reflection

Updated 22 March 2021

Quakers are among many religious leaders inviting the public to join them on Tuesday 23 March in a national day to remember those who have died from any cause during the pandemic and to show support for everyone who has been bereaved.

Quakers join National Day of Reflection

Blog

Engaging with conflict: a toolkit for difficult times

Updated 3 April 2020

Before the world was turned upside down, myself and colleagues wrote a booklet named Toolkit for action: Engaging with conflict, challenging hate. It was compiled as a response to concerns about division and rising hate crime in the UK, and is filled with ideas for how to navigate these tensions.

Engaging with conflict: a toolkit for difficult times

Blog

Navigating uncertain waters: Covid-19 and inequality

Updated 9 April 2020

Policies that show generosity towards asylum seekers make some European politicians very nervous, which is why some of what we have seen in Europe in the last few days is so remarkable. The deportation of asylum seekers is being suspended (Germany), immigration detainees are being released (Italy), homeless people are being housed (France), and some are being given temporary asylum (Portugal).

Navigating uncertain waters: Covid-19 and inequality

Blog

Worship in lockdown: finding new forms of community

Updated 14 May 2020

For a year and a half I had been working for Quakers in Britain, in a project seeking out and sharing ways Quakers can have simpler meetings. I'd found myself asking, "Wouldn't video conferencing save travel time, reduce carbon and include more people?" and, "Can't the spirit move when we are gathered while not physically together?"

Worship in lockdown: finding new forms of community

Blog

A Quaker climate striker talks campaigning through lockdown

Updated 30 April 2020

"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

Blog

Friends reunited: how online Quaker meetings are bridging boundaries

Updated 8 June 2020

Like many Quaker meetings, my own – Forest Hill Meeting in London – has moved into the virtual sphere. One of the unexpected delights of this is seeing the faces of old friends, many of whom who moved away years ago, appearing on our screens. Seamlessly, they become part of the life of the meeting again.

Friends reunited? How online Quaker meetings are bridging boundaries

Blog

Funerals in a time of physical distancing

Updated 9 February 2022

Quaker funerals often have a different feel to other Christian celebrations marking the end of a person's life. They take the same simple, still form as a Quaker meeting for worship and are open to anyone who wants to gather to remember someone who has died.

Quaker funerals in a time of physical distancing

Blog

Where our witness is: an invitation to the QPSW Summer Series

Updated 28 May 2020

We all have our coping methods in this strange time – locking ourselves in the bathroom for 5 minutes peace away from the children, taking up running to get outside and process stress, or allowing ourselves more screentime, as the telly becomes a more significant activity to look forward to. But we all need one thing to get through and that is community.

Where our witness is: an invitation to the Summer Series

Blog

What is climate justice?

Updated 29 November 2023

First written about over two decades ago and enshrined in the Bali principles of climate justice (PDF) in 2002, the term climate justice is increasingly used when we talk about climate change and the environment. But what does it mean?

What is climate justice?

Blog

Examining Quaker privilege and commitment to an equal world

Updated 12 June 2020

"The roots of racial prejudice lie deep within us, and in seeking a solution to the evil results of racial tensions we need to search our own hearts. Our belief in the significance of every individual in the sight of God and their need for an abundant life can guide us even when we shrink before the vastness of the problem." – London Yearly Meeting 1952

Examining Quaker privilege and commitment to an equal world