Issue 17-06-2022

Featured story

Action stations: Angela Greenwood’s Thought for the Week

16 Jun 2022 | by Angela Greenwood

A few weeks ago at my Meeting, in response to ministry from a Friend with a Catholic background, someone ministered: ‘I think my stations of the cross are “Acceptance”, “Courage” and “Compassion”’. There was no elaboration, just that.

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Top stories

In on the act: Rajan Naidu, recently released from prison, on the value of protest

16 Jun 2022 | by Rajan Naidu

‘The very exercise of searching our consciences, engaging in intense deliberation and feelings, can be a powerful agent of growth and development.’ | Photo: Just Stop Oil

‘What do love and justice require of us?’ That simple, open-ended question at the end of the Yearly Meeting epistle presents us with a life-changing challenge. Our lives can be significantly enhanced, I believe, if we respond to it in every area of our lives. There can never be a...

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Conversation piece: Simon Machin on a lockdown interview project

16 Jun 2022 | by Simon Machin

‘I wondered whether the disordering of time, which was the inevitable product of lockdown, has intensified the intimacy and introspection of the interviews.’ | Photo: ExtraECC

The well-worn adage attributed to the Christian anarchist, Elbert Hubbard, ‘When life gives you lemons, make lemonade’, tartly suggests that even adversity can be turned to something productive. Recently, an experiment in recording the life histories of Christians in the public square, and making them freely available online, has proved...

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Should it stay or should it go? Abigail Maxwell on language

16 Jun 2022 | by Abigail Maxwell

'Learning from each other’s experience helps us care for each other.' | Photo: by Kealan Burke on Unsplash

How do you tell Quakers what to do? You persuade us. Better still, you win us over with the clear spirit-led beauty of your words.

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Comfort food: Sergei Nikitin meets Ukrainian neighbours

16 Jun 2022 | by Sergei Nikitin

‘They came over to our place and brought the famous Ukrainian pampushki.’ | Photo: Cabbage pie, courtesy Sergei Nikitin

They had to flee. They had to leave the ancient city of Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, because of Russian military aggression – because of the shelling and sirens calling people to hide themselves underground.

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A ragged doll

16 Jun 2022 | by Harvey Gillman

'I kept the doll for many years until like me it fell apart among the rage and strife of a later war.' | Photo: Kevin Charit on Unsplash

(A recreation from an incident in Sergei Nikitin’s How Quakers saved Russia.) They came from a far away country. I don’t know how. They did not speak our language. A few words perhaps. Kwakera or something. I remember that now. Foreigners are rare these days. Strange faces but...

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Quaker wins Luxembourg Peace Prize

FREE 16 Jun 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

A Quaker peace expert has been awarded the Luxembourg Peace Prize for his lifelong commitment to peace.

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Quakers pay tribute to Bruce Kent

FREE 16 Jun 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

Quakers have paid tribute to the veteran peace campaigner Bruce Kent who died last week. Paul Parker tweeted: ‘Here @BritishQuakers we are sorry to learn of the death of Bruce Kent. He stood firm in his opposition to nuclear weapons throughout his long life. His contribution to the UK peace...

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Friends reflect on global food crisis

16 Jun 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

The ‘structural drivers’ of global food insecurity need to be addressed, in addition to providing humanitarian aid.

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Friends House library reopens

16 Jun 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

The Library of the Society of Friends re-opened this week after more than a year of major refurbishment.

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BYM’s diversity report reveals guidance for change

16 Jun 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

An external audit of how Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) performs on equity, diversity and inclusion has revealed that there is room for improvement.

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‘Lift as you climb’ says new Quaker dame

16 Jun 2022 | by Rebecca Hardy

Quaker Ann Limb, from Milton Keynes Meeting, has been awarded a damehood in the jubilee birthday honours’ list.

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Comfort food: Sergei Nikitin meets Ukrainian neighbours

16 Jun 2022 | by Sergei Nikitin

They had to flee. They had to leave the ancient city of Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, because of Russian military aggression – because of the shelling and sirens calling people to hide themselves underground.

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System, go: Piers Maddox wants an end to empire

16 Jun 2022 | by Piers Maddox

War in Ukraine has been many years in the making. Its origin isn’t hard to find, if you’re prepared to look. There’s only one system in the world that seeks global domination and endless war.

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Quaker Shaped Christianity: How the Jesus story and the Quaker way fit together, by Mark Russ

16 Jun 2022 | by Tim Gee

The Woodbrooke tutor Mark Russ is known for encouraging Quakers to engage with radical theology. In Quaker Shaped Christianity we learn something more of his journey: first rethinking the Christianity he encountered as a child, then discovering more inclusive spaces like Greenbelt and the Society of Friends.

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Letters - 17 June 2022

16 Jun 2022 | by The Friend

Meaningful reparations Having read the Britain Yearly Meeting epistle, I am unsure of what is meant by the term ‘meaningful reparations’ in the context of British society’s culpability in the slave trade. I hope that any initiative from Quakers would lie in the field of education. This could mean...

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