Category Archives: WAGGGS

“will/kommen/an/kommen” – because we are engaged in our local community!

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Scouts and Guides contributing to refugee support activities in their local communities in Europe (14): a story from Styria, Austria:

„Like a number of other regional Scout and Guide Associations in Austria and confronted with the realities of the situation faced by refugees arriving in their country, members of the regional board of Steirische Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen (the Scouts and Guides of Styria, a member of  Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen Österreichs (PPÖ) thought how best Scouts and Guides in Styria could offer their skills, time and material to refugee support activities in their local communities.

While a number of Scouts and Guides quickly joined other volunteers from civil society organisations and contniue to engaged at the main regional refugee welcome centre outside Graz, the capital city of Styria, the regional board called for a meeting with representatives of all Scout and Guide Groups of Styria to discuss which further activities could be envisaged, remembering their promise to ‘leave this world a little better than they found it’.

The result is the new initiative “will/kommen/an/kommen” (welcoming/arriving). ‘With this project we want to express that as Scouts and Guides we are not only here to contribute to prevent that children, young people, women and men who had to leave everything behind are exposed to further hardships as they continue their journey. We are also concerned about how we can best welcome into our local communities those refugee children and young people and their families who have applied for an asylum in our country.’

This is why the Scouts and Guides of Styria started collecting relevant methods and materials for child and youth work, plan expert led workshops and trainings for the Scout and Guide Leaders, and organise children’s game afternoons, to name but a few examples through which the association wants to underline its intention to live to the project’s motto ‘will/kommen/an/kommen’.”

If you are involved in a similar refugee support activity, let us know and we will share it, too!

Creating a better world for unaccompanied refugee children

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Scouts and Guides contributing to refugee support activities in their local communities in Europe (13): a story from Tirol, Austria:

“Due to the growing number of stories and pictures in the media, we noticed that there is a significant amount of unaccompanied children and young people among the refugees seeking asylum in our country. This convinced us, members of the Provincial Youth Council (Landesjugenrat Tirol) of the Scouts and Guides of Tirol (Tiroler Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen, a member of PPÖ – Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnnen Österreichs) to launch an activity adressing this particular aspect: the project  ‘Create a better world: Gute Taten für Kinder auf der Flucht’ was born!

With this project, we want to draw the public’s attention to the destiny of unaccomanied children and young people among the refugees arriving in Tirol. At the same time we also give visibility to the Scout and Guide Movement in our country and explain our involvement in local community actions in support of refugees.

Within a day we had created a big information board and sought permission for the authorities to have an information stand in Innsbruck’s main pedestrian zone. And we found enough volunteers among local Scout and Guide Groups to be present from 22 September to 8 October 2015.

The activity is essentially a fund raising campaign in support of the Austrian branch of SOS Kinderdorf, the international organisation whose mission it is to ‘build families for children in need, we help them shape their own futures, and we share in the development of their communities’. A number of the unaccompanied refugee children have already been welcomed by SOS Kinderdorf and our fund raising activity helps SOS Kinderdorf to provide them with psychological support, language courses, recreational activities and, last but not least, a stable home and the possibility to develop a self-determined life. At our information stand, we explain this and invite pedestrians to donate some of their change for this cause.

And the best part of the story so far: within a week our Scouts and Guides collected more than EUR 3000! The enthusiasm about this unexpected  success of our campaign glows both in the people directly involved and those walking by and hearing about it. Evidently, there are also pedestrians who are annoyed and do not sympathise, but the overall feeling of being able to make a significant difference is what carries this project most.”

If you are involved in a similar refugee support activity, let us know and we will share it, too!

Just another volunteer at Dortmund’s main refugee welcome centre

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Scouts and Guides contributing to refugee support activities in their local communities in Europe (12): a story from Dortmund, Germany:

“When it became evident that the many refugee families would continue their travel to different parts of Germany, including Dortmund, once they will have reached our country in the southern province of Bavaria, members of Stamm Weisse Rose und Stamm Vagabunden, two local Scout and Guide groups from Dortmund and members of Bund der Pfadfinderinnen un Pfadfinder e.V., one of the National Scout and Guide Associations in Germany, decide to offer their time, experience and skills:

They join volunteers of other local civil society organisations at the Dietrich-Keuning-Haus, which had been designated as main welcome centre for refugees arriving in the city of Dortmund. The prinicpal task for the volunteers is helping with the checking, sorting, and piling of donated cloths and other goods while others start setting up the distribution chain. Yet other Scouts and Guides join the organising team of the centre, responsible for making sure that enough volunteers are available all time and that they are allocated tasks according to their skills.

Many trains each with up to 500 refugees are expected to arrive in Dortmund for several days, but the main welcome centre at the Dietrich-Keuning-Haus is ready: a local, multilingual welcome committee awaits the first groups of refugees: just listen to these two short features broadcast by Radio 91,2 which capture the atmosphere just before the arrival of the first trains in Dortmund. Or read this article published by The New York Times last week.”

If you are involved in a similar refugee support activity, let us know and we will share it, too!

We want to see these children smile and laugh again!

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Scouts and Guides contributing to refugee support activities in their local communities in Europe (10): a story from Klagenfurt, Austria:

“We just wanted to make these children smile and laugh again”, says Monika, from the Kärtner Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen (the Association of Scouts and Guides of Carinthia, a member of Pfadfinder und Pfadfinderinnen Österreichs).

“That’s why we have joined a group of other volunteers from different local community organisations, including Caritas Kärnten, the Hilfswerk Kärnten and the Carinthian branch of the Muslimische Jugend Österreichs.”

“We are happy that Scouts, Guides and Leaders from different Carinthian Scout and Guide Groups make available their time, enthusiasm and skills running regular afternoons of playing, drawing, and other activities with children and young people of refugee families in one of the refuges centres in Klagenfurt, capital city of Carinthia.”

If you are involved in a similar refugee support activity, let us know and we will share it, too!

Let’s invite our new neighbours and meet the refugees!

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Scouts and Guides contributing to refugee support activities in their local communities in Europe (9): a story from Freistadt, Austria:

“When we realised that a growing number of refugee families were given accommodation in and around our city and that their daily routine was anything but varied, we spontaneously decided to invite our new neighbours to sepd an afternoon with us.

Some twenty refugees currently live in a former customs building, literally miles away from the city and due to the secluded location of their lodgings particularly dependent on external support and accompaniment.

Our invitation went to these families in particular but also to other refugees staying elsewhere in Freistadt. And so, one sunny late summer day, some fifty children, young people and their families turn up at our Scout Hall and were met by many members of our local Freistadt Scout and Guide Group (member of the Scout and Guide Association of Upper Austria).

We all spent a wonderful afternoon together, with barbecue, games and other activities. And we listened to the sometime incredible stories about the challenges our guests had encountered on their journeys from their former homes in Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and other countries.

The hours went by too quickly and looking back the afternoon had not just provided the refugees a welcome change in their otherwise dull routine but allowed us, the local Scouts and Guides to understand better the situation these children, youngsters, women and men had found themselves in eventually making them refugees. We have gained a group of new friends!”

If you want to share a similar story about your association’s support activity for refugees in Europe, let us know and we will publish it, too!