Reviews Articles

A Precariat Charter

26 March 2015 | by Tony Weekes

Do not be content to accept things as they are, but keep an alert and questioning mind. Seek to discover the causes of social unrest, injustice and fear; try to discern the new growing-points in social and economic life. This brief extract from Quaker faith & practice (23.01) offers us a...

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A convenient truth

19 March 2015 | by Martin Wilkinson

In recent powerful statements, Quakers in Britain have committed themselves to reducing the damage we do to the planet by use of carbon fuels and to working for greater economic equality. Both of these concerns are rooted in hundreds of years of Quaker inspiration and experience. But it has not...

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Spectacle, reality, resistance

12 February 2015 | by Peter Coltman

Human beings do not naturally kill each other. In Britain, the chances of being murdered are slightly less than one in 100,000 – a product of natural revulsion against violence and of culture rather than a fear of the law. In the USA, which has substantially higher rates of homicide than the...

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The Christmas Truce

05 February 2015 | by Diana Lampen

‘Old Bill’ by Bruce Bairnsfather: 1916), image from Bullets & Billets. | Project Gutenberg, via Wikimedia Commons.

The Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) recently offered a play for family audiences (children of 10+) at Stratford-on-Avon based on the 1914 Christmas Truce. Sadly, the run has ended, and there is no plan to bring it to London. For my husband and me it raised the question of how to introduce preadolescent...

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Child of our time

22 January 2015 | by Malcolm Elliott

It is hard to explain anti-Semitism. The Christian church once held the Jews responsible for the death of Jesus, despite the fact that his execution was carried out by Roman authority. Antipathy toward the Jewish race has persisted throughout European history, denying citizenship and restricting Jews to ghettos where they...

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See you soon Caroline!

22 January 2015 | by David Birmingham

During the first two years of the second world war America was a neutral country and American Quakers, unlike British ones, were able to conduct relief work in mainland Europe. A glimpse into the records has enabled Bernard Wilson, a Canterbury Friend, to write a young person’s novel about...

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Happier people healthier planet

15 January 2015 | by Richard Murphy

Happier people healthier planet by Teresa Belton is a fascinating book that took me a lot longer to read than I expected. It is, a bit like Quaker faith & practice, a book that few would, I feel, want to read from cover to cover in a sitting. I think...

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The Turning Circle

01 January 2015 | by Jill Slee Blackadder

Janni first saw Alice when she was eight, but only briefly: ‘even as she looked, the girl began to look transparent, like a projected picture and then she faded away entirely’. Janni is a child of our time but Alice, who becomes her only real friend, lived in the same...

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Open for transformation

18 December 2014 | by Ian Kirk-Smith | 1 comment

A ‘call to return to the roots of our faith and to be clear about our theology’. | keith schurr / flickr CC.

This year’s Swarthmore Lecture, Open for transformation: Being Quaker, considers the symptoms of illness in a patient and offers some remedies in a clear and confident voice. It is a voice that, for some, contains traces of a dreaded word: preaching. Others discern leadership and a prophetic vision. The...

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The Quaker way

11 December 2014 | by Alec Davison

Most of those who become Quakers today will have made a spiritual journey to arrive at this destination. We are now a Society of convinced Friends rather than cradle Quakers. Many daughters and sons of Friends continue their parents’ questing and move beyond the Society, even if holding to Quaker...

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