Friday, 21 December 2012

It's Chriiistmaaaas!

Christmas is well and truly upon us - the presents are wrapped, the tree is decorated and the work Christmas parties beckon.

Speaking of Christmas parties, we had our own end of term celebration this Wednesday at Coffee Republic, complete with a special Christmas Quiz and festive 'speed dating' to get to know each other better. I know that the run up to Christmas is a busy time for many, so special thanks to those who made time to come along.

Details about our 2013 programme will follow after Christmas, but I can confirm that our first gathering after the Christmas break will be Wednesday 16th January at Coffee Republic. Further details to follow - its looking like an exciting term.
Many thanks for being part of our community this year - here's to even greater adventures in the months to come!

May God bless you all with peace, joy and fresh hope this Christmas,


Sam & Victoria, Sara, Lizzie and Elaine

Friday, 14 December 2012

Conneticut

Face hatred with love, and fear with courage. If surrounded by need, strive to be of service. Above all, be an agent for peace.

Today as always, our hearts are with those affected by senseless violence, which to varying degrees, is all of us.

Via Beware of Images.

Sunday, 9 December 2012

End of term

No gathering this week, but do think about the issues we have been learning about this year while doing your Christmas shopping. Remember that where you spend your money is a vote for the kind of world you want to live in...

We will be having a final gathering of 2012 next week however (19th December), so come along and celebrate the end of a fantastic second year. There will be plenty of time to relax and enjoy each other's company, to reflect on what we have achieved this year and maybe even a Christmassy quiz. What's not to like?

That's at Coffee Republic on North Finchley High Road from 7:30pm on the 19th. See you there!

Festive cheer


Wow - we had a great evening on Wednesday - two dozen gifts donated, wrapped and labelled ready for the Bohemia's Christmas dinner for older people from local nursing homes.

Thanks to all who came, donated and made it such a success. We filled the front part of the pub, sparked some interesting conversations with other customers and will hopefully make a small but real difference in the lives of the old folks who get one of the presents.

Here's a few snaps from the evening...

   
 



Sunday, 2 December 2012

Christmas at St Bs


Justice Matters is pleased to be associated with St Barnabas Church, Woodside Park. Here are some details of the many and varied Christmas events happening at St Bs over the coming weeks. Whether you normally go to church at Christmas or not, you will find a warm welcome and festive cheer at any of the following...

Sunday 16 December
11:00 - Community Carols at Tally Ho Corner, Finchley High Road
17:30 - Carols by Candlelight (with Japanese translation)
20:00 - Carols by Candlelight (with Spanish translation)

Sunday 23 December 
08:00 - Holy Communion
09:00 - Family Craft Morning
10.30 - Family Brunch in the Parish Hall
11.30 - Nativity and Carols
17:00 - Strawberry Vale Carols, Green Man Centre, Strawberry Vale
19:00 - meet&feast@7 with Communion

Monday 24 December
18:00 - Christingle
23:00 - Carols and Communion

Tuesday 25 December
10.30 - Christmas Day Family Celebration

St Barnabas Church, Holden Road, Woodside Park, London N12 7DN


Feltoe's Folk Carols 2012

Friends of Justice Matters, the fabulous Feltoe's Folk are performing another night of carols and cheer at the Elephant Inn, North Finchley this Friday (7th December) from 8pm.


Feltoe's Folk are a foot stomping seven piece band comprising of whistles/melodica/bodhran (Adam Dore), fiddle (Sarah Wu), double bass (Mike Dore), guitars (Andrew Feltoe & Chris Dore), cajon drum (Josh Hill) and vocals (Jo Dore, Chris Dore, Adam Dore)

Last year they packed the pub to standing room only. This year they've promised some great new reels you can sing along to, as well as old favourites.

Come along, bring a friend or two - all proceeds are going towards the great work being done at the North London Hospice, so bring a light heart and a heavy wallet!


Saturday, 1 December 2012

Update

Just a quick post to remind you that we are partnering with the Bohemia pub in North Finchley to give presents to isolated older people this Christmas. Pick up a gift for a lady or gent (max spend £10 per gift) and bring it along to the Bohemia on Wednesday 5th December where we will wrap them together. Christmas jumpers and reindeer antlers optional...


This is a practical opportunity to bless our neighbours, support a local business and build community in our area so do make an effort to join us - why not invite your colleagues? Even if they can't came, they might still want to contribute a gift. All the information's on our website. Don't forget to say you're coming on Facebook too!

Plans are underway for our Christmas party - we'll circulate details as soon as they are confirmed.

See you on Wednesday!

16 Days of Activism

Tomorrow marks the middle of the 16 Days of Activism campaign - marking the days between International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women and Human Rights Day (10th December). Read our member Ann-Marie's latest blog in the Huff Post on the campaign and follow 28 Too Many's next 15 themed posts & tweets!

Do 'Like' the 28 Too Many Facebook Page if you haven't already to help them progress their cause!

"A total elimination of all violence against women and girls may be hard to imagine but each day I think about saving one girl from FGM. This means she is spared from a painful, traumatic and potentially fatal procedure."

Shared from the Justice Matters Facebook Page

Injustice in your pocket

Earlier this year we screened Blood in the Mobile, about blood minerals mined in the DR Congo and used in mobile phones. Now Friends of the Earth have done some new research into tin mined for use in smartphones - find out more and then take action!


Shared from the Justice Matters Facebook Page

Barnet PledgeBank

Another opportunity to make a practical difference to someone in the community this Christmas:

"Barnet Council will coordinate getting seasonal gifts to young carers, but only if 12 people will donate a gift."

http://pledgebank.barnet.gov.uk/donateagift2012

Shared from the Justice Matters Facebook Page

Sunday, 18 November 2012

JM Weekly Update

Hello friends

Its that time again - the third Wednesday in the month, which can only mean that it's time to get together for another cafe session. This will be our final session in the Rough Guide to being an Ordinary Radical season (though not the last session of term, don't worry! More on that below.) As trailed last week, this week we have Ash Chafe coming to speak on his experience of life as an ordinary radical living on Strawberry Vale - be sure to come along and hear what he has to say! 

That's 7:30pm this Wednesday at Coffee Republic in North Finchley. Come early, grab a coffee and a pasty and meet someone new.


Don't forget that we gave you two challenges last month - to adopt a new ordinary radical habit and to invite someone along to this session. We look forward to seeing how you've done! In all seriousness, we are eager to see JM grow further - we want to fill Coffee Republic with members (and Raj's till with enough takings that we can further reduce our room hire costs), so please do get out and spread the word!

Speaking of getting out, some of us spent yesterday out of our comfort zones at Brent Cross. Read more about what we were doing and why in the post below.

I'd also like to flag up another opportunity to do something practical - we are partnering with The Bohemia to provide gifts and Christmas dinners to some of the older people of Finchley. The idea is simple: buy a gift for an older lady or gent, bring it along to our next pub session (5th December) and we'll spend the evening wrapping them up. There are more details below. This is an excellent opportunity to support a local business, invest in our community and raise our visibility, not to mention to bring festive cheer to some senior citizens. We'd love for all of you to get involved with this, so get thinking about what you might give...


That's all for now - have a great week, y'all!


Sam and Victoria, Elaine, Sara, Lizzie

Dressing up as a toilet at Brent Cross

Me and Victoria (sans toilet costume)

Yesterday, I did two things I've never done before. Ahead of World Toilet Day on the 19th November and encouraged by the Justice Matters spirit of getting involved, I went along to support Elaine and others raise awareness and funds for WaterAid.

I've never stood in a public place and collected for a good cause before (at least, not since my junior school days, when I once spent an afternoon helping to pack people's food shopping while dressed as a bear for Children in Need. There are no pictures, I'm afraid.) To push me further out of my comfort zone, I was dressed as a toilet. (Again, I'm sorry to say there are no photos of me thus attired).

Tina, Elaine (sporting the toilet costume)and Victoria

As we learned when WaterAid came to speak at JM last year, 2.5 billion people around the world live without access to clear water and sanitation. It's not exactly a glamorous subject, but imagine for a minute not having a toilet to use when you need it. This injustice results in the deaths of 2,000 children every day from water-borne diseases. In fact, more children in the developing world die from diarrhoea than measles, AIDS and malaria combined. It also causes health issues for women who hold on until after dark, so no one can see them go, only to face the threat of assault from being out alone at night.

I don't know how much we raised yet (I'll post an update when Elaine tells us), but I'm pleased to have had the opportunity to be involved in tackling the indignity suffered by too many of our neighbours. We will be finding more opportunities like this for members of Justice Matters to put their passion into action and live out  the lessons from our Rough Guide to being an Ordinary Radical. I hope that many more of you will join us next time we step out of our comfort zone to "seek justice [and] defend the oppressed".

Outside John Lewis - clearly popular with ethical shoppers!

Festive cheer

Justice Matters is excited to be partnering with Finchley's favourite new watering hole, The Bohemia, to provide gifts and a Christmas dinner for isolated older people in the Finchley area.


The idea is simple: buy a gift for an older lady or gent (recommended £10 max) and then bring it along to The Bohemia on the 5th December where we will gather from 8pm to wrap the gifts together. If you aren't able to buy a gift, you can pay for a meal ticket (£7 each). Simpls.

We are also waiting to hear back from Wandsworth Prison about the option of sending gifts to the children of prisoners through Prison Fellowship. We'll confirm this option and further details ASAP.

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Rough Guide to being an Ordinary Radical (Part 3)


Why would someone leave comfortable suburbia to move onto a run-down local estate? Come along and hear Ash from Hope House explain why he moved into one of Barnet's most disadvantaged neighbourhoods and what happened next...

This is the last session in our Autumn series, so don't miss out!


Wrap Up London 2012 | HandsOn London

If you have an old winter coat taking up wardrobe space then this would be a good thing to do with it...


"Hands On London's second annual coat collection campaign will take place from Monday 5 - Friday 9 November. We have set our targets high, and building on last year's success are aiming to collect and distribute 10,000 coats to London’s most vulnerable to over 80 different shelters and charities."

http://handsonlondon.org.uk/en/wrap-up-london-2012

Shared from the Justice Matters Facebook Page

Sunday, 4 November 2012

Pinch and a punch, first (Wednesday) in the month


Its the start of a new month and a new cycle of the Justice Matters community rhythm. This means that we will be at the Bohemia in North Finchley this Wednesday for a pub session. In the second part of our series Looking Up, Looking Out and Looking In, we will be chatting about how we Look Out to engage new members. Join us from 8pm.


Meanwhile, don't forget Victoria's challenge to embrace a positive new habit ahead of our next cafe session and Elaine's invitation to join her in raising awareness and money for those without access to clean water and sanitation. JM is not only about learning to do right, but also actively seeking justice and defending the oppressed, so do take up these opportunities to get involved in making a practical difference!

Other things that might be of interest to you on the Justice Matters website this week include:
If you see an article you think others would be interested to read, a blog post you want to share or an event you'd like to promote, do let me know. We are keen to curate content from across the community, not just the things that I think look interesting!

Enjoy the start of your week and we look forward to seeing lots of you at the pub on Wednesday.


The wrath of Sandy


Like many people, I was struck this week by the images of hurricane Sandy tearing through America's East Coast. There was a grim fascination to the sight of such iconic and familiar locations battered by winds and flood. Of course, we've seen several of them face destruction before on the big screen, not least in films like The Day After Tomorrow, but to see such disaster strike in real life was shocking.


Of course, its not just Hollywood blockbusters that have threatened New York with destruction by flooding. Al Gore's seminal documentary An Inconvenient Truth also highlighted the Big Apple's vulnerability to extreme weather. Indeed, one of the iconic images of Gore's presentation - the flooding of Ground Zero - came to pass thanks to hurricane Sandy.


Of course, Gore's point was to shock Americans into taking climate change seriously, to make the perils of climate change tangible to US consumers. Many will be hoping that after this tragic storm, more will take the threat seriously and change their behaviours accordingly. I certainly do.

Saturday, 3 November 2012

Well played, sir. Well played.

In the final weeks of presidential elections, words often get heated. This week, a right-wing American pundit referred to President Obama as a retard. The use of such a word by a prominent individual is fairly shocking, but all the more surprising is this brilliant, grace-filled response that the pundit received from American Paralympian, John Franklin Stephens:

"I’m a 30 year old man with Down syndrome who has struggled with the public’s perception that an intellectual disability means that I am dumb and shallow. I am not either of those things, but I do process information more slowly than the rest of you. In fact it has taken me all day to figure out how to respond to your use of the R-word last night. 
I thought first of asking whether you meant to describe the President as someone who was bullied as a child by people like you, but rose above it to find a way to succeed in life as many of my fellow Special Olympians have. 
Then I wondered if you meant to describe him as someone who has to struggle to be thoughtful about everything he says, as everyone else races from one snarkey sound bite to the next. 
Finally, I wondered if you meant to degrade him as someone who is likely to receive bad health care, live in low grade housing with very little income and still manages to see life as a wonderful gift. 
Because, Ms. Coulter, that is who we are – and much, much more.
After I saw your tweet, I realized you just wanted to belittle the President by linking him to people like me.  You assumed that people would understand and accept that being linked to someone like me is an insult and you assumed you could get away with it and still appear on TV.
I have to wonder if you considered other hateful words but recoiled from the backlash.
Well, Ms. Coulter, you, and society, need to learn that being compared to people like me should be considered a badge of honor.
No one overcomes more than we do and still loves life so much. 
Come join us someday at Special Olympics.  See if you can walk away with your heart unchanged. 
A friend you haven’t made yet, 
John Franklin Stephens
Global Messenger
Special Olympics Virginia"
What better way to confront hate and prejudice than with this? Were that we all be known for speaking with such grace and truth in the face of injustice.



Shared from the Justice Matters Facebook Page

Bond, villain?

WARNING: PLOT SPOILERS


Last week a number of us went to see the new Bond movie. I have to say, I thought it was brilliant - great casting, exciting set pieces, pathos, thrills and just the right touch of nostalgia. That said, there was one scene that jarred with me: the moment when Bond casually walks in on Severine's shower essentially unbidden and, you know, does his thing.


It seems it I was not alone in finding this moment awkward - the excellent Giles Coren has written a searing article slamming this and other persistently chauvinist themes in the latest Bond outing. Too controversial for his paymasters at The Times (who have recently acquired the rights to the Bond canon and launched a new Sky Bond channel), Coren posted his critique on his wife's cooking blog.
"I am ashamed, as a man, that women are still compelled in the 21st century to watch movies in which the three female outcomes are:
1) Judi Dench’s ‘M’ dies, and is replaced by a man;
2) The young abuse victim is shagged by Bond and then killed for a joke; and
3) The pretty girl who manages to remain chaste despite Bond’s ‘charms’ is rewarded at the end with a job as his secretary."
Bond is indelibly linked with Britain (for what other franchise would the Queen jump out of a helicopter?!), but is it right that our country should be so proudly associated with such a character?

What do you think? Did Bond's behaviour impede your enjoyment of the movie?

If it didn't should it have?


Sunday, 28 October 2012

Call to action - World Toilet Day

All this term we've been talking about stepping out and being more radical. In that spirit, on Saturday 17th November, we are going to put our dignity aside for the sake of the 2.5 billion people who still don't have access to adequate sanitation (that's nearly two fifths of the world's population) to mark World Toilet Day. But don't worry, our indignity will be nothing compared with those who don't have toilets - we will just be wearing them!


We'll have a fair amount of freedom in the shopping centre and will be eye-catching in our costumes. Hopefully our enthusiasm for the cause will make it possible to engage people in conversation or at the very least, raise a smile and get them digging in their pockets. We will supply you with t shirts, balloons, stickers etc and also be able to give you some useful, thought provoking facts.

The day will start at 10am and we'd be thrilled if you could join us and support this venture, even if it's only for a short time. According to the Brent Cross management it's possible to raise really good sums of money and the more on team the better.

Please contact me (Elaine) on 07932 646 496 to let me know when you can come so I can arrange where to meet you.

Go on - be brave and join us standing against poor sanitation.


Monday, 22 October 2012

Looking Out

While our cafe sessions this term are exploring what it means to be an ordinary radical, our autumn pub sessions will look at how we can develop and improve the network itself.


Wednesday 7th November, 8pm
JM has grown from an idea to a community of 20-30 people that meet regularly and another 20-30 that follow us on social media or receive our weekly emails updates. That's very exciting, but we want more. We dream of filling Coffee Republic with 40 people every month, of being able to make a tangible impact on issues we get behind and empowering even more people to find out how to act on their passion to see more social justice in our world.

At this pub session we'll be at the Bohemia sharing tips on how we talk to friends and colleagues about being part of Justice Matters and other ideas for reaching a wider audience.

It promises be another awesome evening - see you there!

Sunday, 21 October 2012

Lecture: Terrorism, National Security & Civil Liberties


The East Barnet Anglican-Methodist Partnership Annual Social Justice Lecture
"Terrorism, National Security and Civil Liberties"
Speaker: Lord Carlile of Berriew QC (former government advisor on anti-terrorism legislation)

Tuesday, 6th November 2012 - 7.30pm at Brookside Methodist Church, 2 Cat Hill, East Barnet EN4 8JB.

For further information, contact Revd Colin Smith.
020 8449 8386 / CASMITH1898@aol.com

Boom! Whizz! Crackle!

Join us for this unofficial JM gathering - the annual bonfire and fireworks display at Totteridge Cricket Club.


Friday 2nd November
Gates open at 5pm, entertainment and stalls from 6pm, bonfire lit at 6:30pm and fantastic fireworks display at 7:15pm. Fully licensed bar, hot dogs, burgers, mulled wine, soup, and much more. Adult tickets ate £7 in advance or £10 on the gate.

Call 020-3519-2779 or go to Cricket Club for tickets.

Hope to see you there!

Caroline Burns on being an Ordinary Radical

In Part Two of our series, The Rough Guide to being an Ordinary Radical, we heard from Caroline Burns, Bolivia coordinator for Food for the Hungry. Caroline spoke passionately about her experience of following a call to Bolivia, where she spent several years working outside her comfort zone to promote nutrition and basic health, while at the same time overhauling the management and finances of the project she was leading there.


She made no apology for speaking boldly about her faith and the part it has played in her journey into becoming an Ordinary Radical. For Caroline, believing and trusting in God played a vital role in her decision to embark on such an adventure. As she described it, "to be ordinary is to operate in your own ability; to be an ordinary radical, is to reach beyond what we can achieve by our own strength and operate instead by faith".

Like Wendy in last month's cafe session, Caroline urged listeners to discover their passion through talking to others and then to embrace opportunities to get involved with that passion. In other words, learning to say "yes". You may not know where that yes will lead, but Caroline encouraged us with a verse from Proverbs: "Trust in the LORD with all our heart and lean not on your own understanding."


In this way, she also encouraged us with the words of Oswald Chambers, not to dwell on the scale of the challenge ahead but rather to draw inspiration from what has already come to pass:
"The needs are so enormous, and the conditions so difficult, that every power of the mind falters and fails. We tend to forget that the one great reason underneath all [efforts to foster peace and justice] is not primarily the elevation of the people, their education, nor their needs, but is first and foremost [a response to the saving sacrifice] of Jesus Christ."

Join us next month for the third and final session in this brilliant series, when we'll have the fantastic Mr Ash Chafe sharing his experiences of life as an ordinary radical living on a local estate. That's Wednesday 21st November at Coffee Republic in N Finchley from 7:30pm.

Do also join us for our pub session on the 7th November, when we'll be discussion how we Look Out to invite and include new members into the network. We have a vision to be a community of thirty to forty people regularly coming together to be inspired and equipped to change the world (plus plenty more connected into us via email, Facebook and the website). Come along to share your ideas for expanding our reach and get some tips on how to talk to others about JM. Full details to follow shortly.

Practical steps to change the world

During this term, we have been collecting simple actions that each of us can do to make a difference to the world we live in. Ryan has kindly typed these up, so here we have a top 25 Everyday Tips for Ordinary Radicals.

  1. Switch your energy provider to one that uses more renewables.
  2. “Soap-up” before running shower.
  3. Cut down on petrol ‘fill-ups’ (conserve fuel).
  4. Allotment sharing, or collective sharing of your fruit and veg harvest.
  5. Do some gardening for the elderly in exchange for growing fruit and veg in their garden.
  6. Use E-Cloths.
  7. Buy ecover washing up liquid and clothes washing liquid. You can even get refills from local natural food and health stores - so it saves plastic too.
  8. Send less to landfill less - get a compost bin.
  9. Turn off unnecessary lights at home.
  10. Turn off plug sockets that aren't in use (eg. mobile phone chargers).
  11. Don’t leave TV on standby – switch it off when you're not using it.
  12. Eat meat sparingly (say, once or twice a week). Its very energy and water intensive to farm.
  13. Go vegetarian, vegan or pescetarian.
  14. Make your own cleaning products for bathroom / kitchen / glass / floors (lemons and limes have natural cleaning properties).
  15. Buy organic food.
  16. Recycle.
  17. Walk or cycle to places rather than driving.
  18. Don’t waste paper - use portable electronics rather than printing things out that you only need once.
  19. Reuse old paper by tearing it into quarters and using it for shopping lists and fridge notes.
  20. Research the ethics of your supermarket. Consider switching to Waitrose, M&S or Sainsburys.
  21. Make your own clothes.
  22. Get involved in clothes swaps.
  23. Shop at charity shops - supports people in need and extends the life of discarded clothing. The ones that in affluent areas often have top fashion labels and barely worn items!
  24. Convert car engines into being fuelled by recycled vegetable oil from restaurants (bit more effort but great idea!)
  25. Don’t get a lawn mower – get a goat! You get a mowed lawn without the cost of fuel plus regular milk - what's not to like?! To be fair, this probably isn't too practical for most of us, but Urban Shepherding is a real thing. Perhaps a more practical response is to share a lawn mower with your neighbour - after all, how many mowers does one street need?
At the end of our last gathering, Victoria challenged us to commit to doing one of these by the next time we meet. We'll be looking forward to hearing what people get up to when we meet in November. 

Which one will you do?


Sunday, 14 October 2012

The redemptive struggle to forgive

I found this article in today's Independent inspiring and challenging. What do you think? What would you have done in each of these situations?


"Eric Lomax, who died on Monday aged 93, was one of thousands of British soldiers taken prisoner by the Japanese in 1942 and forced to build the 418-mile railway to Burma. He was tortured until there was not a patch of unbruised skin between his shoulders and knees; 900 blows in six hours broke arms and ribs. At night he was confined to a cage coated in his own excrement.

Somehow he survived. But back in Scotland, Lomax was tormented for decades by nightmares. Post-traumatic stress led to estrangement from his father and the breakdown of his marriage. The mental scars refused to fade...

... Anger, hurt and bitterness is the commonest response to cruelty. It fuels sectarianism in Iran, resistance in Afghanistan and the blood feuds of Syria. Often it does not abate. When the killers of James Bulger were released, eight years after the murder, the dead toddler's mother said: "I never knew I had so much hate in me." Winnie Johnson, the mother of one of the victims of the Moors murderers, could not forgive for almost half a century until she died recently...

... Eric Lomax was different. He set out almost 50 years after the war to meet [his captor and tormentor], his heart filled with utter loathing and hate. But something extraordinary happened. "When we met, Nagase greeted me with a formal bow," he wrote on the website of the Forgiveness Project. "I took his hand and said in Japanese, 'Good morning, Mr Nagase, how are you?' He was trembling and crying, and he said over and over again: 'I am so sorry, so very sorry'. Lomax found himself saying: "We both survived."

Forgiveness turned to a friendship of nearly two decades."


From The ultimate heroism is forgiving the enemy - Comment - Voices - The Independent:

Bringing joy to dark places

While it is definitely too early to be thinking about Christmas (though Tesco and others don't seem to have got the memo), it could be worth thinking about getting behind this fantastic campaign already...

"Sadly, there will also be children in the UK who won’t enjoy the basic luxuries a cosy family home; they will be spending Christmas in a refuge, having escaped domestic abuse – often with few of their toys, games or clothes from the home they have fled. Which is why domestic violence charity Refuge – Red’s partners in the Speak Up Save A Life campaign – run an annual Christmas Present appeal.


Every year, Refuge try to ensure that every woman and child in their refuges receive a minimum of two to three presents each to unwrap on Christmas day. As Refuge say, 'The Christmas gift initiative is vital to ensure that refuges became places of joy on a day that has the potential to very bleak and hard.'

The charity have a gift list at John Lewis for the appeal so it could not be simpler. You can go as small as a counting block for £2.99, to as big as a pair of roller blades for £40. Whatever you pick, you will know that there’s a child in a refuge somewhere who will have a present to open on Christmas morning – thanks to you."

(Source: Red Online - John Lewis Refuge gift list)

In addition, the Prison Ministry at St Barnabas Church is also running the Angel Tree Project again this year - another opportunity to bring light and hope to dark places this winter. We'll share more details about this opportunity as and when we know more.

Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Update - 08.10.12

This being the second week in the month, there is no official gathering, but I know some of you have begun to gather in 2to4 Groups and other smaller settings, which is great. If you are interested in finding out more and/or joining something like that, let us know - we'd be pleased to help facilitate.

If you like classical music, Ian has send us details of a charity concert happening tomorrow evening in aid of Barnet Carers and the Barnet Alzheimer's Fund. Details are available in the post below if you are interested.

We look forward to seeing you all next Wednesday (the 17th) at Coffee Republic for our next cafe session. Caroline Burns will be our guest speaker, sharing her experiences of a life less ordinary working with disadvantaged communities in Bolivia. Our last gathering when we heard from Wendy was inspiring - be sure not to miss this equally exciting session. We want as many people as possible to benefit from this series (and the community in general), so why not bring a friend...?

7:30pm at 778 North Finchley High Road.


Have a great week everyone - see you soon!

Charity concert

If you like a spot of classical music and raising money for good local causes, then why not pop along to Henrietta Barnett School tomorrow evening and enjoy both! Tickets are available on the door.


Thanks to Ian for sharing this - let us know if you go along or if you have anything else you'd like to promote...

Saturday, 6 October 2012

Building community

A few photos from our recent pub gathering. One half of the Justice Matters strap line is "building community" (the other half being "bringing hope" if you hadn't noticed). Just 18 months ago, this was just an aspiration. Today we have a mailing list of 50 people, 60 followers on Facebook and between 15 and 25 people regularly attending our gatherings.



Its great fun to be part of such a dynamic and diverse community and there's room for more. Come along to our next session and see for yourself...