Quakers in London's Online Community

Category: Quakers in London

  • Getting to Know: Chaundra

    Getting to Know: Chaundra

    Name: Chaundra

    Role: Member of the Development Group & Governance sub-committee 

    Local Meeting: Friends House

    What parts of your service are you looking forward to?: I feel really blessed to be trusted by Friends to help lay the foundation of the next iteration of our community across London. And I think that’s what most inspires me about this work – thinking and trying to discern what will help Friends thrive to do what we feel truly called to do. To listen to the breadth of experience and to the inner light and to find the openings to be really led. 

    What’s your favourite quote from QF&P?: Dearly beloved Friends, these things we do not lay upon you as a rule or form to walk by, but that all, with the measure of light which is pure and holy, may be guided; and so in the light walking and abiding, these may be fulfilled in the Spirit, not from the letter, for the letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life.

    Anything else to say?: I hope that Friends can find opportunities in the new structure and start to help us in the building of our revitalised community. I really hope over the next year, filling out QiL starts feeling like a “doing it together” endeavour. 

  • Decision Making at KWAM

    Submitted by Susie Paskins (KWAM Clerk on 17th May) & Carol Griffiths (KWAM Clerk of trustees)

    KWAM agreed some time ago in principle to join the single Area Meeting for Quakers in London (QiL). We would like QiL to be a success and would like KWAM to participate fully in its arrangements, but there are still areas where further discernment is needed regarding its scope.

    We held a threshing meeting in April 2026, facilitated by Rachael Swancott of Woodbrooke, to address the question ’What do we need in order for KWAM friends to be able to make a decision on joining a unified London Area Meeting in a way that is acceptable to us all?

    The threshing prompted follow up discussions among us, and a positive re-engagement with the subject. It also highlighted a number of concerns which remain to be resolved, including finances, membership, outreach and community building, and nominations and appointments.

    At our May Area Meeting we reviewed a well-argued paper proposing a way forward. This outlined some areas in which we might like to retain responsibilities for activities within a ‘cluster’ of local meetings (as contemplated by the LDG). This included work on outreach/community building for Quakers in South West London; much has already been done in this area and there is a strong feeling that it should continue and be encouraged and funded. The idea of a cluster was greeted with enthusiasm.

    Friends are preparing proposals to help us to discern the precise nature of our cluster, including allowing existing KWAM funds to remain available to support this and other aspects of our current Area Meeting that are important to us.

    The final decision on whether or not to join QiL will be taken at our July Area Meeting.

  • The Festival of Biblical Literature

    The Festival of Biblical Literature

    The Festival of Biblical Literature will be held in Ealing Meeting House between 12th and 14th August 2026. This is the third year for the festival. 

    The festival celebrates the Bible as a collection of literature, with seminars, music and poetry. The purpose of the festival is not to convince people of a particular set of beliefs, but to increase the use and enjoyment of the Bible as a common literary resource. The festival is independent of and does not receive funding from any religious, political or ideological group.

    All the speakers have an academic background and the artists include Philip Gross, a Quaker and winner of the TS Eliot prize. Lunch, tea and coffee are provided.In his Swarthmore lecture, Stuart Masters reminded us of the importance of the Bible to early Quakers.  

    The festival provides an opportunity for Quakers to reflect on how they might use the Bible to challenge people who are quoting from scripture to support views and policies that are not in line with Quaker values.
    For more information and to book tickets go to https://www.festivalofbiblicalliterature.co.uk/

  • Now Recruiting: Finance Assistant – Quakers in London

    Now Recruiting: Finance Assistant – Quakers in London

    Are you an organised financial administrator who would like to be part of the staff team of Quakers in London?

    Our seven Area Meetings are merging with London Quakers Property Trust (LQPT) to form a new Area Meeting: Quakers in London (QiL), at the end of 2026.  

    We are seeking a Finance Assistant to work alongside the Senior Finance Manager as this merger takes place and to support its ongoing operations. As the Finance Assistant, you will be responsible for the day-to-day financial processing and reporting for QiL, supporting both centrally managed and locally managed Local Meetings. You will  be an integral part of the finance team.  

    The role of Finance Assistant will be London based, full-time, and on a continuing contract. The start date will be September 2026. 

    Closing date: 28 June 2026 

    Find the application pack, including more information about the role and how to apply in the PDF below. 

  • A single Area Meeting for London: A Quick Recap

    The 7 Area Meetings (AMs) in London have agreed to merge at the end of this year to become a new single AM called Quakers in London (QiL). This followed 8 years of exploration and consultation.

    Why?
    Several of our Existing AMs can’t find people to serve as clerks, treasurers and trustees. No officers – no AM.

    How?
    All the AMs will merge into the existing charity, London Quakers Property Trust (LQPT). No need for expensive property transfers. LQPT will change its constitution to become an Area Meeting like any other, controlled by its members (us).

    When?
    QiL is Planned to start in January 2027.

    Who is doing the work?
    AMs appointed reps to the London Development Group which works up detailed proposals

    Who takes the decisions?
    Until QiL is formed the London AMs meet together as a Joint London Area Meeting (JLAM). JLAM takes the decisions (that’s us).

    Won’t QiL be too big?
    34 local meetings will form QiL. That is the largest AM in the UK. We will all have to work to make it succeed and become a true community. Newsletters like this will keep friends informed. Local meetings can continue to meet each other as friends or in new groups to pursue concerns or interests.

    Get involved!

    Come to the JLAM meetings. Offer service on a role.

    Have a question? Send it in using quill@quakersinlondon.org. You can read an even more detailed history of the project at on the Quakers in London website.

  • Getting to Know: Bernadette, lDG Co-Clerk

    Getting to Know: Bernadette, lDG Co-Clerk

    This post is part of a short series on getting to know some of our newly appointed Friends to QiL committees.

    Name: Bernadette

    Role: Co-Clerk to London Development Group

    Local Meeting: Brentford and Isleworth

    What parts of your service are you looking forward to?: Worship and discernment with other LDG members (and the wider London Quaker community) on how best to bring forward this simplification project for London friends.

    What do you wish more Friends understood about your role?: How many elements there are in the merger work and the delicate balance between getting on with it… and taking the necessary time to get it right.

    What’s your favourite quote from QF&P?: “For a Quaker, religion is not an external activity, concerning a special ‘holy’ part of the self. It is an openness to the world in the here and now with the whole of the self. If this is not simply a pious commonplace, it must take into account the whole of our humanity: our attitudes to other human beings in our most intimate as well as social and political relationships. It must also take account of our life in the world around us, the way we live, the way we treat animals and the environment. In short, to put it in traditional language, there is no part of ourselves and of our relationships where God is not present.” – Harvey Gillman, 1988 (21.20)

    Anything else to say?: My thanks for the upholding and the loving support.

  • Getting to Know: Kate, Co-Clerk

    Getting to Know: Kate, Co-Clerk

    This post is part of a short series on getting to know some of our newly appointed Friends to QiL committees.

    Name: Kate

    Role: Area Meeting Co-Clerk

    Local Meeting: Wanstead

    What parts of your service are you looking forward to?: I just have a general “sense of adventure into the unknown”

    What do you wish more Friends understood about your role?:  I wish only to be a servant of the meeting, but I know that this sometimes requires me also to lead.

    What’s your favourite quote from QF&P?: Today it’s “Be still and cool in thine own mind …”

    Anything else to say?: I’ll be doing my best, with the help of coclerks and the spirit of worship.

  • Two Quakers Who Changed Bermondsey Forever

    Two Quakers Who Changed Bermondsey Forever

    Featured image: ‘Dr Salter’s Daydream’ by Ethan Doyle White, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

    Last month, London Link teenage Quakers gathered for a residential weekend at Forest Hill Meeting House in south London – and one afternoon took them on a journey back into one of the most remarkable chapters in the borough’s history.

    Guided by local Quaker Sheila Taylor, the group walked the streets of Bermondsey to trace the lives of Ada and Alfred Salter: a couple who, driven by their Quaker faith and a fierce sense of social justice, set about nothing less than transforming one of the most deprived corners of Victorian and Edwardian London.

    Who were Ada and Alfred Salter?

    When Ada Brown arrived in Bermondsey in the late 1890s as a social worker, she found a neighbourhood of crushing poverty: overcrowded slums, rampant disease, and streets without a single tree. It was there that she met Alfred, a doctor who had turned his back on a comfortable Harley Street career to set up a surgery in a converted shop on Jamaica Road, where he treated poor patients for little or nothing. As his friend and political ally Fenner Brockway later wrote, their partnership on Jamaica Road “brought something little short of a revolution to Bermondsey and its people.”

    They married in 1900 and both committed to the Society of Friends, becoming Quakers. Their faith was inseparable from their politics. They helped found the Bermondsey branch of the Independent Labour Party, and Alfred created in miniature an “NHS before the NHS,” importing the latest medical clinics and facilities into the borough.

    Ada became Mayor of Bermondsey in 1922 – one of the first female mayors in the country – the first ever female Labour mayor. In the same year Alfred was elected Labour MP for Bermondsey West. From these positions they drove through an ambitious programme: slum clearance, new cottage-style housing estates, vastly improved sanitation, and Ada’s beloved Beautification Committee, which had planted 7,000 trees on the new estates and streets of the borough by 1930.

    Their personal tragedy makes their public achievements all the more extraordinary. Their daughter Joyce, born in 1902, was adored throughout Bermondsey. Locals called her “our little ray of sunshine.” In 1910, aged just eight, she caught scarlet fever during an epidemic and died. Ada’s sadness never quite left her; it was in her eyes and in her expression all through the years. And yet both threw themselves still deeper into their work. The grief they experienced spurred them further on to improve conditions in the area.

    London Link Group’s Step Back in Time

    The group’s tour began at Wilson Grove, the cottage estate Ada designed for working-class families each home built to a standard almost unimaginable for Bermondsey at the time, with a living room, scullery, bathroom, hot and cold water. From there they walked to the Thames riverfront, where the Salter statues stand. The sculpture, known as “Dr Salter’s Daydream,” depicts the family at a happy time in their lives. It has its own troubled history: the original statue of Alfred was stolen in 2011, presumed melted down for scrap metal. The community raised £60,000 to replace it, and at the same time a statue of Ada was added, recognising that she was very much a figure worth honouring in her own right.

    The walk ended in Southwark Park, with a picnic lunch in the Ada Salter Garden, a fitting place to rest among the trees and flowers that Ada fought so hard to bring to her neighbourhood.

    Remembering the Salters

    The Quaker Socialist Society runs the annual Salter Lecture – a highlight of our Birtain Yearly Meeting. Each year a speaker is invited to address themes of social justice, equality, and conscience, values that Ada and Alfred embodied throughout their lives. Past lecturers have included politicians, activists, and environmental thinkers, keeping the Salters’ spirit of principled, faith-rooted radicalism alive into the present day.

  • Now Recruiting: Property Administrator – The London Quakers Property Trust (LQPT)

    Now Recruiting: Property Administrator – The London Quakers Property Trust (LQPT)

    LQPT is seeking a property administrator to support their work managing Quaker properties across London.

    This is a full time London based role with hybrid working arrangements available.

    The property administrator will be the first point of contact for enquiries relating to Quaker Meeting Houses and LQPT’s residential buildings. The property administrator will provide administrative support to a small property team and will work with staff and other Quaker volunteers to support venue hire and improve systems.

    A successful candidate will have experience in an estate agency, housing association or other similar environment as well as experience in facilities management. The successful candidate will also be a strong communicator and highly organised with the ability to manage and adapt to a varied workload.

    Closing Date 12 June 2026 12:00 PM.

    For more information about the role and how to apply see the Job Description and Person Specification PDF below.