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Pink Triangle Trust (PTT) provides more funding for HELU

The LGBT Humanist charity the Pink Triangle Trust (PTT) has provided more funding for Humanist Empowerment of Livelihoods in Uganda – HELU.

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HELU is a Humanist community based group established in 2012 “to promote Humanism, a life stance with human beings playing a central role in their own lives without depending on religion, culture and tradition but rather having compassion and upholding human rights”. It is a member of the International Humanist & Ethical Union.

HELU’s programme has several activities that include: training in human rights and Humanism, teaching skilled crafts, hair styling, tailoring, baking and confectionery and farming, especially animal husbandry that the beneficiaries use to create incomes to support their families, and a free nursery school promoting reason and science.

Agnes Ojera, HELU’s programme manager, writes on its website: “It takes and requires a lot of resilience and courage to be a humanist in Uganda. Worst are the extreme religious and traditional practices accompanied by unfavourable Government policies. Determined as we are, nothing brings down our courage of preaching a life stance based on reason and facts rather than unrealistic, fictitious ideologies and indoctrination. EQUAL RIGHTS FOR ALL.”

The PTT’s first donation was made in 2015 to build a classroom for its nursery school and provide equipment for it. Now it has funded the purchase of a variety of items for the school including a computer laptop, a laser jet printer, play swings, goal posts. soccer balls, an open air feeding shelter for the children, office stationery and a power invertor for use with the solar energy the group uses.

In all the PTT has donated £3600 to HELU. Other recipients include LGBT History Month, the Uganda Humanist Schools Trust (UK), the Nigerian Humanist Movement, Galop (London’s leading anti-LGBT hate crime charity) and Rainbows Across Borders (a supportive and caring group for LGBT people who are seeking refuge from oppressive and brutal regimes).

For more information about HELU, click here:

For more information about PTT, click here:

 

British Science Festival heads for Brighton in 2017

The British Science Festival, one of Europe’s leading and longest-established science festivals takes place in Brighton in 2017.

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The event to be co-hosted by the University of Brighton and the University of Sussex, will run from September 5-9.

Ivvet Modinou, Head of Engagement at the British Science Association, said: “We are delighted to bring the British Science Festival to Brighton next year. It will be different from the previous Festivals we have run, in that it is being co-hosted by two amazing universities and will take place in venues all over the city over the course of five days.

“As with our 2016 hosts, Swansea, we will be right next to the beach, which will add an extra element for programming and creating some unique experiences for our visitors.”

There will be over 100 events, specially curated by the BSA in partnership with the University of Brighton and the University of Sussex.

Visitors should expect talks, debates, workshops and performances about cutting-edge science from world-leading academics. Topics will cover the whole scientific spectrum including technology, engineering and social sciences.

Prof Debra Humphris
Prof Debra Humphris

Professor Debra Humphris, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Brighton, said: “I am delighted that the University of Brighton will be co-hosting the British Science Festival next year.  We were keen to grasp this wonderful opportunity to showcase our world-leading research alongside cutting-edge science from around the globe in an accessible and engaging way. The city of Brighton & Hove is world-renowned for its Art Festival. By hosting the British Science Festival, we can throw open the doors of our facilities to the wider community, including our new state-of-the-art Advanced Engineering Building that is currently under construction.”

Prof Michael Davies
Prof Michael Davies

Professor Michael Davies, Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research at the University of Sussex, added: “We are thrilled to welcome the festival back to our city.  Many staff still connected to the University of Sussex remember fondly the impact of the event when we hosted it back in 1983.  The ethos of scientific teaching, learning and research at Sussex hasn’t changed since then – we are as passionate today about cutting-edge innovation that spans across the boundaries of traditional academic disciplines to address themes, such as neuroscience, digital humanities and sustainability.  Collaboration sits at the heart of our approach to scientific discovery and impact through combining disciplines, working with a wide range of partners and most importantly engaging and encouraging brilliant minds to be involved.  We look forward to a fantastic festival in September 2017.”

First held (as the inaugural and then annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science) in 1831, the Festival has been the stage for many iconic moments in history – such as the famous debate on Darwin’s then controversial theory of evolution between Thomas Huxley and the Bishop of Oxford in 1860. It also saw the first use of the word ‘scientist,’ in 1834.  The annual meeting has been previously held in Brighton on three occasions: 1872; 1948; and 1983.

For more information about the British Science Festival, click here:

 

 

Environmentalists go naked to strip Brighton beach of rubbish

WEB.600.1Brighton environmentalists invited to take strip off and join a naked beach clean-up campaign on September 18.

Strip The Beach, organised by the World Cetacean Alliance, aims to strip the beach of rubbish, and get into the record books. Organisers intend to bring together a Guinness World Record number of naked people for the event.

Beach clean-ups are conducted around the world with the aim of removing man-made debris from the coastline and recycling or disposing of the collected waste accordingly. Brighton has the UK’s only “Green” constituency, located within the Brighton and Lewes Downs UNESCO Biosphere Region. However, following council funding cuts for street and beach cleaning, marine litter and derelict fishing equipment continues to wash up and remain on our shores.

Organisers of the naked beach clean aim to raise awareness of the problem of marine plastics, sea litter and discarded fishing equipment (“ghost nets”).

Strip The Beach will take place on Brighton’s historic Black Rock naturist beach (Black Rock Station, Madeira Dr, Brighton, BN2 1FY). This is a less populated stretch of Brighton’s seafront, and an area where more flotsam and jetsam accumulates due to prevailing currents and the presence of Brighton Marina.

Russell Arnott, event organiser and Outreach Officer at WhaleFest: Incredible Oceans, says: “At present, 8 million tons of plastic is added to our oceans every year. I can’t even begin to imagine what that much plastic looks like; the number is too big for the human mind to get a handle on. Plastic can take hundreds of years to break down naturally so in the meantime it continues to wash up on beaches all over the world harming wildlife and damaging the food chain. We are hoping that this event will capture people’s imaginations and raise awareness of issues surrounding ocean plastic”.

The event is happening in conjunction with the Marine Conservation Society’s Great British Beach Clean weekend (September 16-19), and is supported by WhaleFest, Incredible Oceans, Brighton Naked Bike Ride and Brighton and Hove City Council.

Organisers aim to connect with other local and national marine organisations and charities, bringing them together for a common cause.

Participation is free, and the event will take place whatever the weather.

Note also that the event is BARE AS YOU DARE but if you’re not naked, you can’t be counted in the World Record!


Event: Strip The Beach

Where: Black Rock Station car park, Madeira Dr, Brighton, BN2 1FY

When: Sunday, September 18

Time: 12 noon – 4pm

For more information, click here:

 

Free day of events today as Brighton Dome celebrates Heritage Open Day

Brighton Dome celebrate their rich heritage and open the doors for the fourth annual Heritage Open Day of free family entertainment, today, Sunday September 11, 10am to 5pm.

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Events and entertainment include behind-the-scenes tours of Brighton Dome, which will give visitors the rare chance to get a glimpse of the famed underground tunnel running beneath the Royal Pavilion Estate; lectures by Dr Sue Berry and Dr Alexandra Loske about the history of the Estate and the development of the town; and a magic lantern show with Jeremy Brooker who revives an attraction that would have been a common feature of Victorian Brighton, and has been described as a precursor to cinema.

There will also be live music in the Café-bar and heritage craft activities for children.

Heritage Open Days is the largest festival of history and culture in England, taking place over four days each September. Every year thousands of events across the country invite the public to explore local treasures for free.

For information, click here:

Schedule:

Backstage Tours
10am, 11am, 12pm, 2pm
Tours last approximately 60 mins

Magic Lantern Show with Jeremy Brooker
11.30am, 12.30pm, 1.30pm
Show duration approx. 30 mins

The Prince’s Dome
12pm – 1pm

A lecture by Dr Sue Berry, author of Georgian Brighton, on The Prince’s Dome – an innovative approach to accommodation for prized horses at Brighton Dome Concert Hall

The Pavilion Estate as it was and might have been
4pm – 5pm

Dr Alexandra Loske, Curator of the Royal Pavilion Archives, will talk about preparing an exhibition of rarely seen images relating to the development of the Royal Pavilion, the Dome complex and the Pavilion Gardens at Brighton Dome Corn Exchange

Pre-booking for tours, lectures and magic lantern shows is essential – email: heritage@brightondome.org

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