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Welcoming young people: 5 insights from visiting Quakers in the USA
Helping Quaker meetings be more welcoming to children, young people and families is something Quakers across both Britain and the United States are doing to ensure the faith is accessible to all.
Welcoming young people: 5 insights from visiting Quakers in the USA
8 badass Quaker women
According to Urban Dictionary, the word 'badass' is: "1. A general term used to describe behaviour that is fearless, authentic, compassionate, and ethical. 2. Well above the social standard for 'normal' behaviour." It's also a gender neutral term, which I rate.
8 badass Quaker women
Quakers: The Religious Society of Hufflepuffs?
This blog unites two of my great interests: Quakers and Harry Potter. As a member of Generation Z, I grew up with the Harry Potter books and films, wrote about queer Harry Potter fanfiction while at university and I listen to a number of podcasts about the series.
Quakers: The Religious Society of Hufflepuffs?
What next for Quaker conciliation work?
When should you intervene to try to bring peace to a situation of lethal violence? How do you speak to people who want to kill each other, and might want to kill you because you're listening to their enemies too? And how long after the shooting stops should you continue working and walking alongside people, helping to embed peace?
What next for Quaker conciliation work?
Why protest shouldn’t be prevented
A key part of Quaker faith is putting that faith into action, trying to change the world using nonviolent methods. For a religion that believes all people have value as children of God, using violence to force change is off the agenda.
Why protest shouldn’t be prevented
6 actions you can take for Palestine and Israel
We welcomed with deep relief the end to the recent round of bombing in Gaza and firing of rockets into Israel. But while the world's attention may have moved on, the violence and structural oppression of the military occupation of Palestine has not ended and the struggle for equal rights continues.
6 actions you can take for Palestine and Israel
Witnessing against the arms trade at DSEI
"Our Quaker community is a gathering together of peacemakers. We gather, we sit together in silent worship, and we disperse again, knowing that the work of peace cannot be accomplished in our meeting houses, it can only begin there. We are convinced that the making of peace demands us to return to our world in love, to stand firm in public, to confront the “powers and principalities", and to assert that in this time of permanent war, no government which involves itself in the arms trade, no government relying on and colluding with a militarised system, can govern well or for the benefit of all. We are resolute and will not submit before a governing hand that subsidises, facilitates and profits from the sale of weapons to ruthless dictators in our name." – Part of Quaker Roots Epistle, a grassroots network of Quakers.
A Quaker response to the DSEI arms fair
Military stand-off over Ukraine: 5 things you can do
On 25 January Quakers in Britain issued a statement urging all sides to "engage in urgent de-escalation and commit to resolving the stand-off over Ukraine peacefully". Since then, we have witnessed the continuation of the military build-up. Despite Russia's recent disputed announcement of a partial withdrawal of some troops, there is continued international concern that diplomacy may fail and that a terrible new war may break out.
Military stand-off over Ukraine: 5 things you can do
Preventing election violence in Kenya
Since 1992, Kenyan general elections have been accompanied by mass violence causing tribal animosity and many other social injustices. The worst being the 2007/08 post-election violence that saw more than 1000 people killed and thousands displaced.
Preventing election violence in Kenya
Taking my seat again: four years being Churches Together in England's 'Empty Chair' President
Four and a half years ago I set up a blog. It was to be called 'Adventures in Ecumenism' and I was planning to explore and share my work as one of the Presidents of Churches Together in England. Sadly, this turned out to be horribly premature: I was not able to take up the role of Fourth President of CTE. Having instead just finished my role as convenor of the Fourth Presidency Group of churches, I'm looking back at that time, what's happened since, and the impacts – both harmful and hopeful – that emerged from that decision.
Taking my seat again: four years being Churches Together in England's empty chair president