All posts by quakersireland

Friends participate in Ecumenical Bible Week 2016

Thinking Allowed - Ecumenical Bible WeekRachel Bewley-Bateman of Churchtown Meeting, Dublin (pictured second from right), delivered a talk on the theme ‘Thinking Allowed – What Bible passages inform and challenge my response to climate change?’ during Ecumenical Bible Week.

Rachel, who is former Clerk of the Europe and Middle East Section of the Friends World Committee for Consultation and has an MA in Biblical Studies, was representing Friends in a chaired panel discussion and open forum, which was held on 19th May in St Paul’s, Arran Quay, Dublin.

Other speakers at the event included:

Archbishop Michael Jackson (Church of Ireland)
Gillian Kingston (Methodist Church)
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin (Roman Catholic Church)
Rev Katherine Meyer (Presbyterian Church)
Pastor Nick Park (Evangelical Alliance)

The full text of Rachel’s talk may be read here.

To find out more about Ecumenical Bible Week, see http://www.bibleweek.ie/.

 

Welcoming Refugees Group (DMM)

Since Autumn 2015, a concern has evolved amongst Quakers in Dublin regarding the refugees (numbering up to 4,000) expected to arrive in Ireland in particular under the Irish Refugee Protection Programme (IRPP) organised by the Government. In January 2016, a group of Dublin Quakers, calling themselves the Welcoming Refugees Group, came together, formed a committee, and have since held a number of meetings to consider possible actions.  As well as pledging support via the Irish Red Cross, individuals in the group compiled a list of ways in which they were willing to assist refugees following their arrival, including by English language tuition/conversation, befriending, arts/culture, work experience and accommodation.

Pending the arrival of the refugees, the group has engaged in efforts to inform itself about the general refugee situation including that of already arrived asylum seekers (over 4,800 in September 2015) in direct provision centres across the country. The group is currently seeking to discern the most appropriate supportive actions to take in relation to refugees already in the country including those in direct provision centres.

The group is represented at meetings of the Government’s IRPP Task Force involving the Red Cross and Religious Representatives.

April 2016

IYM issues statement on homelessness to politicians North and South

Ireland Yearly Meeting has issued a statement on homelessness to politicians North and South of the border calling for urgent action to be taken on the issue of homelessness, including the provision of good quality social housing.

The statement came about as a result of considerable discussion at Yearly Meeting (held in King’s Hospital, Dublin from 31st March to 3rd April 2016), which had been prompted by presentations from several homeless charities.

The full wording of the statement follows:

The Religious Society of Friends in Ireland (Quakers), gathered at its annual meeting, wishes to express its serious concern about the increasing numbers of homeless individuals and families.

In the past Quakers recognised the importance of good quality social housing, and today we believe a home is a fundamental human right.  In this context homelessness is frequently the manifestation of dysfunctional housing provision and weakness of effective policy and regulation.  We call on the authorities in both jurisdictions of Ireland to take urgent action to address the underlying structural causes of homelessness, including –

  • The appropriate provision of social housing
  • Strengthening the rights of tenants in the private rented sector
  • Removing the obstacles to making vacant properties available for occupation.

“A key message for Quakers is the importance of housing as a home, providing a secure place in which to thrive, not merely an individual financial investment.”

(Paula Harvey, Quaker Housing Trust UK)

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Pictured before the session on homelessness at Yearly Meeting from left to right: Dan Sinton, (outgoing) IYM Clerk, Peter Ramsey of Frederick Street Meeting, Nigel Bell of Churchtown Meeting, Fr Peter McVerry SJ of the Peter McVerry Trust and Rosie Castagner, IYM Recording Clerk

The following letter has also been sent to the editors of the national daily papers both sides of the border:

Dear [Editors Name]

The Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Ireland wishes to express its serious concern about the increasing number of homeless individuals and families both south and north of the border.

At our recent Yearly Meeting in Dublin, we heard presentations from people engaged in several different homeless charities.

In the past Quakers recognised the importance of good quality social housing and today we believe a home is a fundamental human right.  In this context homelessness is frequently the manifestation of dysfunctional housing provision and weakness of effective policy and regulation.

We therefore call on the authorities in both jurisdictions of Ireland to take urgent action to address the underlying structural causes of homelessness, including the appropriate provision of social housing; strengthening the rights of tenants in the private rented sector; and removing the obstacles to making vacant properties available for occupation.

Yours sincerely,

Daniel H Sinton,

Clerk of Ireland Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Ireland

This letter was published in The Belfast Telegraph.

 

EcoQuakers & DMM sign Inter-Faith Statement on Climate Change

EcoQuakers and Dublin Monthly Meeting have signed an Inter-Faith Climate Change Statement that has also been signed by many of the world’s religious leaders.

The statement will be handed over to the President of the United Nations General Assembly at a special faith-based ceremony in New York on 18th April 2016.

The Irish Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches have also signed the statement as have religious leaders and individuals of all faiths around the globe.

The purpose of the statement is to follow up on the Paris Agreement.  Right now the agreement is just words on paper. In order to make the world a better, safer place for ourselves and for future generations, it is necessary for world leaders to start taking action – to commit to 1.5°C limit of warming to protect the vulnerable.

Individuals can sign the statement too (until 17th April) here >> http://www.interfaithstatement2016.org/.

Six Key Points within the Interfaith Climate Change Statement:

  1. Urge governments to rapidly sign, ratify and implement the Paris Agreement, and to increase pledges to reduce emissions in line with keeping the global temperature rise to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels;
  2. Insist on rapid emissions reduction and peaking by 2020, in order to keep the 1.5C goal within reach;
  3. Strongly advocate for greater flows of finance, especially for adaptation and loss and damage;
  4. Urge the swift phase out of all fossil fuel subsidies and a transition to 100% renewable energy by 2050;
  5. Encourage faith communities to reduce emissions in their homes, workplaces and centres of worship and to support and stand in solidarity with communities already impacted by climate change; and
  6. Call for fossil fuel divestment and reinvestment in renewables and low carbon solutions, including within our own communities, and/or by engaging companies on climate change.

Irish Quakers commit to sustainability and ethical investments

Quaker Meetings in Ireland are set to become “as sustainable as possible”, following a resolution made by Ireland Yearly Meeting (IYM) on 3rd April 2016.

Each Meeting is asked to develop a sustainability plan before January 2017, taking into consideration factors such as accessibility by public transport, energy efficiency, use of Fairtrade tea and coffee and use of organic and locally sourced food, when possible (EcoQuakers are drawing up a template plan to help Meetings in this process).

IYM is asked to take the same factors into account when planning the next Yearly Meeting.

A commitment was also made to develop an investment strategy by January 2017 to ethically invest all funds* within Yearly Meeting in sustainable and peaceful companies, and to divest from destructive industries, including fossil fuels.

These two commitments were made following the call to action on sustainability that came from the Friends World Committee for Consultation’s Plenary in Peru in January 2016, urging the worldwide Quaker community to re-double its efforts in relation to sustainability.

*this includes all funds invested for growth or income by Yearly Meeting, Quarterly Meetings, Monthly Meetings and Preparative Meetings

Minute 40 of Ireland Yearly Meeting 2016:

Call to action on Sustainability from Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC) Plenary in Peru Claire Conboy-Stephenson has read the minute agreed at the FWCC Plenary in Peru urging the worldwide Quaker community to re-double its efforts in relation to sustainability. It calls on Yearly Meetings to initiate at least two concrete actions on sustainability by January 2017.

The Special Interest Group facilitated by Eco-Quakers Ireland has reflected on this and has proposed a number of actions. We agree to the following two actions:

1.To commit to making all the Meetings within Ireland Yearly Meeting as sustainable as possible, considering such factors as accessibility by public transport, energy efficiency, use of Fairtrade tea and coffee and use of organic and locally sourced food when possible. We ask Meetings to develop a sustainability plan, no matter how simple, before January 2017. We ask Ireland Yearly Meeting to take its sustainability plan into consideration when planning for its next Yearly Meeting.

2.To follow in the steps of FWCC by developing an investment strategy, by January 2017, to ethically invest all the funds within the Yearly Meeting in sustainable and peaceful companies, and divest from destructive industries, including fossil fuels.

We also ask all Meetings to consider how truth prospers with regard to sustainability, taking care to relate this to all of our testimonies – peace, simplicity, truth and equality.

Epistle – IYM 2016

April 2016

To Friends Everywhere

We send warm greetings from Ireland Yearly Meeting, held from 31st March – 3rd April 2016 at King’s Hospital School on the western outskirts of Dublin.   The theme of our Yearly Meeting was “Who is my Neighbour?,  underpinned by a quotation from C. Winifred Lamb written circa 1954: “How can we, such a small insignificant group of people as the Society of Friends help to stem the tide of evil and hate, and greed and fear that is so widespread in the world today?” (Quaker Life & Practice: A Book of the Christian Experience of the Religious Society of Friends in Ireland, paragraph 4.13).

To read the full Epistle – click on the link below

Epistle IYM 2016

‘Who is my neighbour?’ IYM Public Lecture 2016

Will HaireMore than 180 people attended the Public Lecture at this year’s Ireland Yearly Meeting.

Addressing the topic, ‘Who is my Neighbour? What is our Testimony on Inclusion?’, Will Haire of South Belfast Quaker Meeting, called on us to consider how we can include those most in need in our society through a broader social contract, responsible participation in the economy, social service and by leading inclusive personal lives.

“We are challenged to create a counter-culture, challenging the mainstream and consumerism of our society and to argue in what we say, and in what we do, for a different way of life,” said Will.

“We have to argue for a fair tax system, fair pay for all, and for a fair welfare system,” he said, adding that taxes should be progressive, with the weight falling on those who can afford them.

DSCN1657“We have to argue for good, transparent governance of businesses, the economy, the state and indeed all institutions – ourselves included. That fits with our testimony to integrity, to our use of plan language.”

“We have to build better links with those who are experiencing poverty. We have to understand their views, their concerns. We have to include them in the process of our thinking, our action, to create a real dialogue.”

Will concluded: “We have to be the good neighbour, the neighbour to everyone who needs our help.”

You can read the full script of Will’s lecture here – IYM Public Lecture 2016.

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘The Gift of Conflict’ – Marisa Johnson

“Conflict brings with it the potential for deepening relationships, for learning, for transformation and spiritual development.”

Marisa Johnson, FWCC-EMES Secretary
Marisa Johnson, FWCC-EMES Secretary

That was the view expressed by Marisa Johnson, Secretary of the Friends World Committee for Consultation – Europe and Middle East Section, when she addressed Ireland Yearly Meeting’s Ministry and Oversight session on 31st March 2016.

Marisa said that if we welcomed creativity, energy, connection and relationship as gifts, we needed to welcome conflict also, “as being intimately connected with all of these”.

“Just as we welcome the gift of fire to keep us warm and cook our food. Yet we are always aware that, out of control, fire can and does destroy,” she said.

Marjorie Lamb, Margrit Grey, Marisa Johnson

“In order for a conflict to become apparent, it is necessary for someone to care very deeply about something – most people do not seek conflict lightly, so need or passion are necessary to provide the required motivation and energy for conflict to become active. Caring and passion are gifts too.”

Marisa said we should encourage the emergence of many possible solutions, and try them on for size: “Do they meet the needs of all involved? Are they aligned to God’s gracious generosity and loving compassion?”

You can read the full text of Marisa’s talk here – Gift of Conflict – Marisa Johnson.  

Newtown Junior School marks Ireland 2016 by creating a peace garden

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Artist Ciara Harrison and Newtown pupils making poppies for the    Indoor Garden of Peace

Newtown Junior School in Waterford (Ireland’s only Quaker national school) has chosen to mark Ireland 2016 by creating an Indoor Garden of Peace.

Artist Ciara Harrison, a Rathfarnham Quaker and a past pupil of Newtown Secondary School, came up with the idea for the collaborative and educational art project and helped the children bring the peace garden to life.

“As a national school, Newtown Junior School was required to commemorate the anniversary of the 1916 Rising,” said Ciara, “But, as a Quaker school, it was important for them to respect the Quaker ethos of peace, pacificity and non-violence.

“We took on the approach of looking to the future – to the next 100 years – to promote a world of peace. We decided to use the symbol of a white poppy to do this.

Peace Garden_1“The initiative of the white poppy began in Britain in 1933 by a women’s pacifist group as a symbol of peace and non-violence. This symbol is widely used among Quakers in Britain and also in Ireland.

“We were inspired by this group and decided that we would produce a garden of peace where each pupil would produce a poppy (using recycled white fabric) that would then be installed in an area of the school, creating an Indoor Garden of Peace that would invite visitors, staff and pupils to walk among it and, at the end of the exhibition, to take a poppy of peace home with them.”

Safeguarding trainings for youth & children’s leaders – Dublin & Belfast

Youth Leaders – Sunday School Teachers….. This is just for you!!!!!

keeping safeIYM Education Committee and Youth Coordinator are hosting  worthwhile trainings which will help us support our Young Friends better.

We would really like to see you there if you are volunteering with our young people in any way!

Where? Rathfarnham  Meeting House  Date?14/04/16

South Belfast Meeting House  Date? 21/04/16

Time? 6:45-9:45pm  Cost? Free

What is the training about?

This accredited training is based on the principles of good practice in safeguarding children and young people as outlined in ‘Our Duty to Care’. This half-day certificated training programme covers:

  • awareness of safeguarding children and young people;
  • procedures for reporting concerns; and
  • code of behaviour for staff and volunteers.

Who delivers the training?

Keeping Children and Young People Safe training is delivered by qualified and accredited trainers who work for Volunteer Now . They have experiences of safeguarding issues

If all Sunday school teachers can’t make it, please encourage one or two to come. They can then share their learning with others in their Meeting.

Youth Leaders: this is really important for you!!! Please let me know if you (and others) are coming. There are 25 place available.

Carolyn  McMullan  iym.youth@outlook.com  Mobile Number 07834571117