@AyoCaesar I'm researching women hunger strikers, and going through materials on Yarl's Wood. I came across this blog that mentions 'a lady called Ash Sakar'. I wondered whether you'd seen it? Seems you gave some women hope in some dark times! https://t.co/X2VCCmnRz3
Finding it weirder ad weirder to be on here considering the nature of our work. We're generally not into far right advocates. Come visit us here on Blue Sky: https://t.co/ukheKxtQtG
Would you like to help research the history of food poverty, and women’s responses to it? Would you like to help write a book on the subject in conjuncture with contemporary food bank users?
Then join our exciting new team of volunteers.
https://t.co/x2GU8hlhiG
We're back!! ✨🙌 Excited to announce that our new project about the history of food poverty (and women's responses to it) starts Jan 2025. And we're recruiting a new project manager to run it. See our website for deets 👉 https://t.co/x2GU8hlhiG
Calling all 80/90s ravers! Can you help shape our next oral history project? We need your views on our Story of Rave project. Complete our survey (it takes 5 mins max) https://t.co/qffpQglFPD
BLOGGED: Suella Braverman doesn’t understand what the word armistice means.
A dive into the history of peace activism and what our lost heroes would have wanted in Gaza.
https://t.co/gTgsgQNxlj
Come make a miniature world of lockdown memories, and explore our miniature exhibition @TheMillE17 Many people have not had a chance to properly talk much about their lockdown experiences. We invite you to use art to explore your feelings of what we all went through.
LOVE this story of lockdown legends @e17stbarnabas 🥰A powerful example of the HUGE difference volunteers make 💪 Pleased we can share their incredible work through our REBEL WOMEN podcast. Listen where ever you get your podcasts, or via our website https://t.co/vyjC8QbOvu
Check out the range of free resources on our website about the social history of women and pandemics. Including this week's podcast about Chrys, who delivered food to people throughout lockdown. https://t.co/RvDac4ZaDy
The Lockdown Legend on this week's REBEL WOMEN is Tracey Roger's who during lockdown fed up to 250 families per week. Listen and subscribe where ever you get your podcasts, or via our website https://t.co/vyjC8QbOvu
Don't miss the Beyond Medicine exhibition by Share UK
On display until Sunday 16 July
This exhibition shares the stories of those who quietly beavered away to keep society moving during the national lockdown in 2020, the majority of whom were women.
https://t.co/y9gfQnWWxz
Esther McVey clearly hasn't heard of education trade unionists like Ethel Froud who helped secure women equal pay by doing exactly this kind of action. It's exactly what we should be teaching young women and girls in school. #knowyourrights#knowyourhistory
On our latest episode of REBEL WOMEN we hear from Guen Murroni, who organised the mutual aid network in Waltham Forest during the 2020 lockdown. Listen and subscribe where ever you get your podcasts, or via our website https://t.co/vyjC8QbOvu