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author | Henry Thompson <ht@markup.co.uk> |
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date | Wed, 31 Jul 2024 19:31:25 +0100 |
parents | 798f529b9767 |
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*Meeting for Sufferings* 7 April 2018 Henry S. Thompson, SE Scotland AM representative All the papers for the meeting are available online at http://www.quaker.org.uk/documents/mfs-april-2018-agenda--papers-package This includes, in particular, the two Review Group reports discussed below. The minutes and other follow-up material are available from http://www.quaker.org.uk/documents/mfs-april-2018-follow-up-package *Meeting for Sufferings Appeal Review Group final report* QF&P provides for an process of appeal to MfS with respect to decisions of an Area Meeting and disputes between Area Meeting. Experience with this process has been less than wholly positive, and MfS commissioned a review. The Review Group reported with recommendations for a narrowed and simplified process, including a preference for a "conflict transformation" approach (as opposed to "conflict resolution") and an explicit place for mediation before things get to Sufferings. We approved these recommendations, and specific changes to QF&P will be forthcoming. We called Area Meetings' attention to the recommendation in QF&P that they should have a "conciliation group". There as some questioning of the value of the phrases "conflict resolution" _or_ "conflict transformation" _or_ any other language which raises expectations of success which cannot be met and sometimes leads to a fear of coercion on the part of the appelant. In this context Friends are reminded that Quaker Life can provide help and guidance to Meetings which are taken by surprise/taken aback by apparently irresolvable internal conflict, and that asking for help _early_ is essential to avoid exacerbating aspects of a situation through ignorance. The Review Group also suggested that beyond the narrow matter of an appeals procedure, the larger question of how we deal with conflict as a Society, as Meetings and as individuals needs to be considered. In this context we were reminded that difficulties around Membership often arise from "lack of familiarity with Quaker ... processes" and that accordingly care for a Ministry of Teaching in our meetings is necessary to help promote this familiarity. *Report of BYM Sustainability Group Review Group* The Review Group reminded us of the Canterbury Commitment: http://www.quaker.org.uk/documents/minute-36-leaflet-2011 The Sustainability Group was established by Sufferings to lead/guide BYM in taking the Commitment forward. The situation is complex, the Sustainability Group has achieved much, but also struggled much. The Review Group recommended laying the Sustainability Group down, probably soon after the next Sustainability Gathering, in favour of mandating coordination between the different areas at the Central level which can and do support sustainability. Concern was expressed by myself and others that giving responsibility for overseeing this coordination to Sufferings without any detail on how this to be carried out leaves a very significant gap and risks simply recreating the Sustainability Group under another name. Actually deciding to lay the Sustainability Group down without a clear picture of what's going to take it place seems premature, and was in the end not supported by MfS, which _did_ support the recommendation for "a specially convened meeting/meetings of the clerks of BYMSustainability Group, QPSWCC, ESP sub-committee, QLCC, QSC, BYM Trustees, the Board of Friends House Hospitality, MfS and all members of Management Meeting," after which we will need to come back to the question of the future for the Sustainability Group and/or the form of its replacement. The need for a clearer articulation of the largely unspoken spiritual basis for the Commitment was raised. The oft-remarked tension resurfaced between a feeling on the part of many that we ought to put sustainability at the centre of our efforts and a recognition that many others don't seem to be interested in doing so. Some quotes from the floor: "It's not surprising that we struggle, and blame each other, and get stuck." (Laurie Michaelis) "This is the biggest thing we've ever tried to deal with." (Laurie Michaelis) "Giving responsibility but no authority to working groups [such as Sustainability Group] is Kafkaesque, not Quakerly" (Lis Burch) "The major problem has been in how we connect a YM concern with the existing BYM workplan." (Lis Burch) "What is it that has caused us to try to do this and fail 5 times?" (Peter Morris) *Restoring Integrity to the Public Sphere* We were asked to consider a concern from an AM on this topic, which asked whether BYM should be a "public champion of truth"? We've had a testimony to truth since the 17th century, but the complex, history to our more recent engagement with this issue begins in 1990 with a concern which created a central "Truth and Integrity in Public Affairs" programme. This was laid down in 2004. We agreed to ask for input on this from Area Meetings, regarding both difficulties experienced and actions being taken. *Trustees Report* There's a _lot_ of work that Trustees do for us, it's quite amazing. Here are just two points of particular interest: The first is expressed in a single 3-line paragraph in the middle of a 10-page report: "We agree that trustees, with the support of Management Meeting, should prepare a multi-year strategic plan. This should be done in careful consultation with committees and Meeting for Sufferings." This is explained as "We acknowledge that there is a lack of an overall strategic framework below the very high level _Our Faith in the Future_ and above the operational plan, which makes prioritising difficult and which we now need to address." The second was a reflection about diversity: "[Trustees] are diverse in gender and geographical spread, do not know on sexuality, and are not diverse on ethnicity." "In terms of age, we are better than many Quaker committees and half of us are in paid employment, but we do need younger Friends. We recognise that time constraints can be a problem for younger Friends who have less flexibility in their work schedules and often have family commitments. "At present only 15 of the 400 places in the BYM committee structure are occupied by under-35s." "We need to be radical as BYM trustees and experiment. Young Friends will bring themselves and bright thinking to being a trustee and learn in the process. We can and will adjust our meeting schedules to accommodate individual trustees." Although filling jobs is hard enough without adding additional constraints, it's worth reminding ourselves that AMs have been asked to look to their own structures in this regard and report back to the centre, and at AM in November we agreed to consider this. As MfS intends to take this up later in the year we should not delay too much longer in doing so if our input is to be available in time.