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FSSE events 2016
Junior Gathering
Key info
Dates Saturday afternoon 20 August to Saturday morning 27 August
Venue Leighton Park School, Shinfield road, Reading, RG2 7ED
Costs Junior Gathering fee: £325.00, including deposit of £50
Ages 11 to 14 years old (must be 11 by 1 September 2016 and under 15)
Theme Truth and Inner light in Quakerism
Number places Approx. 80
Senior Conference
The application for 2016 Senior Conference is open!
- 20th to the 27th August 2016.
- DOWNLOAD Application form
Key info
Dates Saturday afternoon 20 August to Saturday morning 27 August
Venue Sibford School, Sibford Ferris, Banbury, Oxfordshire, OX15 5QL
Costs Senior Conference fee: £325.00, including deposit of £50
Ages 15 to 18 years old (must be 15 by 1 September 2016 and under 19)
Number places Approx. 80
Bursary information
We know that many young people will require help if they are to be able to attend Senior Conference or Junior Gathering. Your local Meeting or Area Meeting may have funds available. We would be glad to offer further advice if required.
It is FSSE policy that no one should be prevented from attending for financial reasons, and we do have a small bursary fund. If you need any help even for a few pounds please contact us.
During Junior Gathering 2015 we met a ex-child solider who shared his moving story of how he was taken away by rebels soldiers and was forced fight and to abduct other children for 9 years before he escaped, however he was met with hostility by his government and was then put in prison and tortured for 5 years before being able to make his way to the UK.
Despite living here for 15 years he is currently still seeking asylum in the UK. His story reminded us of what we learned from Conteh, who we met last year. Conteh was also a refugee and asylum seeker who had fled from conflict. He told us about some of the difficulties and dangers that asylum seekers in the UK face and how unfortunate their situation is. We were motivated to write a letter to the Home Secretary, Theresa May, asking for the situation and the treatment of asylum seekers to be made more fair and humane.
The letter can be downloaded here, or read below.
28th August 2015
Dear Theresa May MP Home Secretary,
We are writing on behalf on Junior Gathering, a group of 76 young Quakers aged between 11 to 14.
We heard the very distressing story of one asylum seeker and ex-child soldier. After being kidnapped and used as a child soldier in East Africa, he was then forced to fight and abduct other children for almost a decade. After finally managing to flee this person ran to the authorities of his country, however he was then subject to imprisonment and torture for 5 years without trial until finally being released. After these 5 years, he finally made it to the United Kingdom, a place where he thought that he would be safe and treated with compassion. However, this was not the case.
This person has now been in the United Kingdom for fifteen years. His asylum status is still uncertain. It is cruel to allow someone who has gone through so much as a child soldier and has been rejected by their own government to be kept waiting so long, not knowing whether they can stay. It is saddening that not only has his own government rejected him, but he has also been neglected by ours.
Because he is not legally allowed to work, he has no way of earning more money than the little he is given by our government, What he does get he spends on essentials such as bus travel to college, where he is trying to further himself by earning his GCSEs.
He can only afford to phone his mother once a month. They have been separated for more than two decades with no communication until recently.
We demand that asylum seekers not be allowed to fall into such a situation.
Firstly, it is inhumane and undignified for someone to not be able to plan their life due to such uncertainty. Therefore the decision on asylum cases must be shortened. Fifteen years is longer than most of us have been alive.
Secondly, this case shows that many asylum seekers want to improve themselves and want to be able to contribute to our society. Therefore if a decision on asylum is yet to be made, the asylum seeker should be able to earn a living.
Thirdly, asylum seekers must be treated as more than just statistics and an inconvenience, but as the people and human-beings they really are.
In Friendship,
On behalf of Junior Gathering,
Anna-Tina & Ailwyn
Clerks