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Details of Local & Occasional Activities
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Turning the Tide Workshop
Series -
Nonviolence for a Change,
Huddersfield FMH,
19 Nov 2011
#3:
'Playing with Power - Changing the System
How change happens
and how working together we can make the changes we'd like to see in the world
Further details, see below.
Airton Meeting Historical Study Day,
Sat 8 Oct 2011
Quakerism & its antecedents in
the North of England before the Restoration
Places are limited, early booking is advised.
There will be space on the programme for a few people to give short (15 min)
presentations on relevant topics – we’d particularly like to hear from anyone
who may have researched the Grindletonians, the Seekers or other Yorkshire
communities which may have influenced early Quakerism. There will also be ample
space for visual displays. Anyone who may wish to give a talk or display
materials/posters is invited to contact Laurel Phillipson (tel. 01756 753965 or
e-mail
dw.l.phillipson@btinternet.com ).
Flier/booking form.
George Fox & Margaret Fell get stuck
in a lift, season starts 3rd Oct 2011
The tour includes Pickering, York, Sheffield, Leeds and
Hull.
Turning the Tide Workshop
Series -
Nonviolence for a Change,
Huddersfield FMH,
from Sep 2011 - Aug 2012
#1:
'Nonviolence a Dangerous Idea', Sat 24 Sep 2011
A series of workshops hosted by Turning the Tide in
collaboration with Huddersfield Quakers and other local peace and justice groups
-for people with some experience of working with others to address injustices
and make changes. You can sign up for the whole 12 session course, or just dip
into the sessions that interest you.
Early booking is advised. For full course book by 1st
Aug. The fee is £350 for the year; £35 per workshop, and concessions and payment
plan options are available. Venue is Friends Meeting House,
Church Street, Paddock,
Huddersfield,
HD1 4TR. Wheelchair accessible.
For applications materials and more information see:
www.turning-the-tide.org
or email:
denised@quaker.org.uk, or
stevew@quaker.org.uk, or
call: 020-7663-1061 & 1064
QVA Holiday, Barmoor,
18-22 July 2011
A short, self-catering holiday for young Autistic adults in the delightful
surroundings of Barmoor.
Helpers & autistic young people needed.
Details here.
Risk & the Criminal Justice
System, 14th May 2011
An all day conference presented by Leeds Quaker
Criminal Justice Group
Leeds, Oxford Place Centre
Speakers:
David Latham, Chair of the
Parole Board
Bob Johnson, former Prison Psychiatrist
Eric Allison, The Guardian Prison Correspondent
Marian Partington, The Forgiveness Project
Lindis Percy, 15 times-imprisoned Peace Campaigner
Plus: Exhibition of Photographs of Prisoner Art by Robert Taylor
For application forms and further details contact Phil
O’Hare 0113-2564072 philomena.ohare@btinternet.com
Airton Barn Reopening,
1st May 2011
Airton Meeting will be celebrating the repair, refurbishment and
re-opening of The Barn (hostel) on the 1st of May, and they invite Friends who
would like to see what has been accomplished, to join them. The programme for
the day has yet to be arranged but will include food, friendship, entertainment
(perhaps clog dancing), and a meeting for worship.
The revamped barn will have 6 hostel bunk spaces plus space for
about 14 people to sleep on the floor. Airton would like to emphasize its
potential for daytime and evening events, including visits, meetings and
retreats by Quaker groups. In addition to the oldest extant Quaker meeting house
(in use by 1658), it will have disabled-accessible meeting rooms, kitchens,
library and wc's
Contact Laurel
Philipson (tel. 01756 753965 or
dw.l.phillipson@btinternet.com) nearer the time to get more
information.
Kindertransport,
9 Apr Pickering QMH & 16 Apr Friargate, York QMH
A play by Clap Trap Theatre Company, hosted by
Quaker Theatre Company
Performances will be at 7:30pm. Tickets £8. Phone 01751-474043
QCEA Climate Conference, 5th Mar
2011
Friargate, York,
Quaker Meeting
House
A one-day conference on energy security, conflict &
climate change.
With Linda McAvan, MEP. Organised by Quaker
Council for European Affairs.
To
register please send name and full contact details (including
e-mail address) with conference fee of £10, payable to QCEA
British Committee, to:
Vivien Flynn, 45 Lucombe Way, New Earswick, York
YO32 4DS
Further details from conference@qceabc.org.uk or
vivacevivaldi@hotmail.com
Quaker Tapestry Stall,
25-28th Nov 2010
Harrogate International Exhibition
Centre, Kings Road, HG1 5LA
The Quaker
Tapestry (based in Kendal) will be displaying 16 tapestry panels in a prime
location at the Knitting and Stitching Show in Harrogate, from 25-28th November.
Do take advantage to come to the show and recommend it to your friends and
acquaintances.
Volunteer stewards (2-4 hours) will get a free pass to the Show. No experience
necessary; The role involves – supervising the panels, chatting to visitors,
smiling, selling sewing kits, books and cards in the associated small shop.
Offers of help to Bridget Guest at bridget@quaker-tapestry.co.uk or
01539-814860 (direct line).
The Word,
7:30pm 19-23 Oct 2010,
various locations
'THE
WORD' asks Friends searching questions about the nature of their faith. The play
lasts 45 mins and is followed by a discussion. It is unsuitable for under
sixteens.
Performances in Leeds, Kendal, York, Sheffield, Malton.
Tickets £8. Further
details
On Human Folly,
7:30pm 8th Oct 2010
A play by Plain Quakers Theatre Company
Huddersfield Meeting House, HD1 4DR. Tickets £4 from Mike Glover,
01924-520422, or on the door.
This two-man play was performed at the Edinburgh Fringe
Festival in 2008 and then toured the country, from Penrith to Exmouth and
Bristol to Cambridge. It has also been seen in Ireland, France and the
Netherlands.
On Human Folly is a show that raises difficult questions
without easy answers and provides a quizzical sideways look at token
environmentalism. The play moves easily between the past and the present, and
recounts the 1772 journey to England of John Woolman, the eighteenth century
American Quaker, and his death in York that year. Woolman’s story is told from
the perspective of two historical Quakers who might have observed his progress,
Caleb Marsden a Yorkshire tradesman and Samuel Galton, an important Birmingham
arms manufacturer whose family was subsequently disowned by the Quakers. Woolman
worked tirelessly to abolish slavery: three generations of Galtons sold weapons
to slave traders.
A contemporary parallel to Woolman’s story is provided by
two mature present-day gents who imagine that re-cycling plastic bags will save
the planet. The play challenges contemporary values; can we stop getting and
spending long enough to think of the consequences of our thoughtlessness? Do we
have too much ‘stuff’? Is being green really the answer?
Don’t miss it; the play
asks the most important question you will ever have to answer: ‘What did you do
when you realised greed was killing the world?’
There are no sermons, but a
good story, some jokes, and some painful decisions.
Huddersfield Peace Lecture,
7:30pm 13th May 2010
Making Friends with 'the
enemy'
with Jo
Berry & Pat MacGee This dramatic evening challenges the knee-jerk
reactions of anger and blame, and shows how the deeper roots of war, terrorism
and violence can be approached through understanding, dialogue and a
peaceful, non-violent approach. Click for
poster.
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