Saturday, 19 November 2011

Competitions and campaigns

14 November
The local WI craft group has been invited to take part in the town's Christmas Tree Festival so its members are putting their minds and hands to work on our entry. Although it isn't a competition we want to do our best and basically if truth was told we want to be the best. Did you watch Kirstie Allsopp on ITV this week pitting her skills against other WIs at the Hampshire and New Forest Show? She became very competitive and is in awe of WI judges.I must admit that I don't think the average WI member would go so far as to take an expensive course in some new craft in order to enter a class but it makes more interesting television and is good publicity. All the exhibits looked good and professional and the members were a suitably mixed bunch of normal people enjoying themselves, although competing.How lucky Hampshire Federation is to still have a designated marquee at their county show!

10 November
A very busy meeting of the Education & Current Affairs sub-committee today.It is part of this committee's job to keep up-to-date with the national and county campaigns.At present there is a lot of activity about the planning system reform, the scaling back of the legal aid system and the threatened closure of libraries.The WI has mandates on all these topics so every WI member may do her bit by keeping the government aware of the likely impact on women in the UK from changes in legislation. Locally, of course we are working on the care of stroke victims and their carers and BFWI has also been asked to be part of the consultation process on the trial of street lighting cuts in Buckinghamshire. At the same time we try to host interesting events and outings to broaden the members' minds, such as writers' workshops and historical or environmental days.It all sounds rather blue-stockingish but we also have a lot of fun. I wonder if anyone would like to come and join us or just arrange to sit in on a meeting? You would be welcome so get in touch with the office at Stuart Lodge.

8 November
The local book group has been reading Noughts and Crosses by Malorie Blackman. This is a prize-winning teenage novel. Several readers thought it too tough meat for teenagers but when you see what they watch on screen I don't agree.The majority considered the novel well worth reading. It is a Romeo and Juliet story set in an indeterminate time and place where the white population is subservient to the coloured---the reverse of the school segregation battles in the American South. The author doesn't give us a happy ending and the characters are so well drawn albeit in simple language that we did care about their decisions as they grow up and struggle against the society operating in the world around them.

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