Issue 30-10-2020

Featured story

‘Are there universal truths and, if so, what is their basis?’

FREE 29 Oct 2020 | by Bob Lovett

After twelve weeks of shielding, protecting myself and the NHS from the consequences of this pandemic, I welcomed the gradual easing of restrictions. But the messages from the government have become increasingly confusing and at times contradictory. I have been led to reflect on the extent to which my confidence...

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Top stories

8,000th issue for The Inquirer

29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

'The Inquirer has been continuously publishing since 9 July 1842.' | Photo: Cover of The Inquirer.

The Inquirer, the Unitarian fortnightly magazine that started a year before the Friend, is getting ready to publish its 8,000th issue in November.

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‘We are radical, we are in love with this planet and we are acting in fierce love for our future.’

29 Oct 2020 | by Arne Springorum

‘You are a Quaker, what will you go to prison for, what truth to power will you speak?’ | Photo: Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona on Unsplash.

In the autumn of 2018 I read Elisabeth Hering’s book about early Friends, their determination and suffering that led after a decades-long struggle to the achievement of the Act of Toleration. Those same weeks I was also deeply moved upon reading the obituary of a US Friend and Quaker from...

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‘Support for Georgian Quakers became pressing after the Russian invasion.’

29 Oct 2020 | by Ian Tod

‘Even with the dominance of the Orthodox Church, some Georgians searched for truth through philosophies provided by other denominations and churches.’ | Photo: Tbilisi by Denis Arslanbekov on Unsplash.

For over a decade, Jesus Lane Meeting in Cambridge, along with Meetings in Bristol and elsewhere in the UK and Ireland, have been supporting Quakers in Georgia. Georgia is located in the Caucuses region of Eurasia, at the crossroads of Western Asia and Europe. It is bounded to the west...

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‘Climate change affects everyone. So what is getting in the way of doing the right thing?’

29 Oct 2020 | by Roland Carn

'Nonviolent, peaceful civil disobedience is sufficient to raise awareness. But on its own it’s not enough to bring about needed change.' | Photo: by Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona on Unsplash.

A few Quakers took part in Extinction Rebellion’s actions on climate change in Cambridge. Many Friends (and others) are critical of this behaviour. Disrupting traffic is dangerous and can interfere with people who need to get to hospital. It affects the jobs and income of vulnerable people. It causes...

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‘The people are poor while the land is rich in minerals. We have to ask why.’

29 Oct 2020 | by Elizabeth Coleman

' Inspired by Black Lives Matter, we have decided to campaign on the issue of conflict minerals.' | Photo: by Kurious on needpix.com.

The history of Congo is one of suffering, from the horrors of colonialism to the rule of Joseph Kabila. Now there is a new president, Félix Tshisekedi, but those who defend the status quo are still very powerful and progress is agonisingly slow.

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All articles

Breakthrough for nuclear weapons ban

FREE 29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

The UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) has been ratified by the fiftieth state, meaning that it will enter into international legal force ninety days later, on 22 January 2021.

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31 Friends House staff redundant

FREE 29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

Thirty-one members of Friends House staff have opted to take voluntary redundancy after a consultation period to consider how Britain Yearly Meeting (BYM) can meet the financial challenges of the pandemic and the shift towards more local working.

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Yearly Meeting registration opens

29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

Up to one thousand Friends are expected to gather online next month for Quakers’ first online Yearly Meeting Gathering.

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London Quakers want to ‘build back better’

29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

London Quakers gathered last week for a Build Back Better event featuring author and Quaker descendant Mark Thomas, founder of the The 99% Campaign. The event explored the questions: ‘After this upheaval of our lives, what changes do we foresee – and which we want to encourage? What work is in progress...

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Surrey Friend on race

29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

A Quaker from Godalming Meeting gave a talk on racism this month based on her experiences of growing up in the UK with parents from the Windrush generation.

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Hitchin abolitionists remembered

29 Oct 2020 | by Rebecca Hardy

Hitchin Quakers have been noted for their historic work in the abolition movement as part of commemorations for Anti-Slavery Day. ‘Hitchin was one of the first towns in Hertfordshire to set up its own Anti-Slavery Society. Quakers in Hitchin had been involved in the Abolition movement since the late 18th...

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‘In a socially distanced world, the character of encounter changes.’

29 Oct 2020 | by Simon Watkins

Quaker Voluntary Action (QVA) provides practical opportunities to put faith into action, on working retreats. The retreats form a shared experience that combine work, rest and reflection, usually over three to five days.

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What lies ahead

29 Oct 2020 | by Anne M Jones

Mashed into the last summer sunshine cold wind, a paper-cut barb Hints at winter ahead. Though told that warmth would banish this virus it hovers still, a vulture that threatens our fresh horizons Corralls us back into our cups Of joys, miseries and memories.

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Letters - 30 October 2020

29 Oct 2020 | by The Friend

Prisons Week What thoughts come up when you turn your mind to prison and prisoners? Maybe you joined with Prisons Week prayers recently, which include victims of crime. As someone with a long connection with prisons (from tutor in 1980s, then spells working with the prison service, to attending a...

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