Thursday, 20 March 2014

End Hunger Fast Birmingham - Children and Young People's Resource

A free to use resource to accompany the End Hunger Fast campaign. 


 End Hunger Fast is a national campaign to speak out against the austerity politics of the current government that are driving millions of people into poverty in this country. As one of the richest countries in the world, the fact that anyone goes hungry is a scandal. The fact that it is millions, and the figure is growing fast, is totally unacceptable.








End Hunger Fast
Lent resource – Children and Young People
Why This Lent Resource?
These small group studies accompany the END HUNGER FAST campaign for Lent
2014. They can intended to be used alongside the other resources available on the website www.endhungerfast.co.uk especially the daily Bible readings and Hunger Prayer Spaces.
What Will You Need?
You will need all the usual basic craft materials including colouring pens, pencils, paper, card, glue, scissors, junk.  You may also require seeds and compost and for some activities access to cooking facilities would be useful but not essential as cooking could be done off site or at home.  A copy of The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle and a children’s bible are also required.  The crafts do not use food items as this would be counter to the message of the campaign.  Please avoid using food items such as pasta, rice in the collage activity.
The session themes are similar to those in the adult bible study course:
1. At the foodbank
2. Food and community
3. Food and fasting and prayer
4. Food and politics
5. Heavenly food
There is enough material for five sessions but you may find that you have lots of other ideas to extend the topic for a longer period.
Important note
Please be sensitive when discussing food poverty and hunger with your group.  These issues are often hidden and maybe very real for children and young people in your group setting.

  
Session One
AT THE FOODBANK

In the last four years foodbanks have exploded all across UK from a standing start.
According to the Trussell Trust (www.trusselltrust.org), one of the main resource charities for setting up foodbanks especially through faith groups, in 2012-13 foodbanks fed 346,992 people nationwide. Of those helped, 126,889 were children.
Others figures claim up to 500, 000 people used foodbanks in 2013 and 5,500 people were admitted to hospital for malnutrition – all this in the 7th largest economy in the world.

Young People:
Study the shopping list of items in a foodbank parcel. 
Milk (UHT or powdered)
Sugar (500g)
Fruit juice (carton)
Soup
Pasta sauces
Sponge pudding (tinned)
Tomatoes (tinned)
Cereals
Rice pudding (tinned)
Tea Bags/instant coffee
Instant mash potato
Rice/pasta
Tinned meat/fish
Tinned fruit
Jam
Biscuits or snack bar
  

1.    Recipes
How many different meals could you create for a family of four using these ingredients?  What else might you need?  Could you plan three meals a day for three days?  Would you meals change if you could only use a kettle and not a cooker?  Try and use all the main food groups.
2.    Recipe cards – design an easy to follow recipe card for one of your meals.
3.    Discuss how you would feel if you had to eat these meals and foods instead of the ones you normally have. 
4.    You may be able to visit your local foodbank and help sort food.


Children
The very hungry caterpillar needs food to become a beautiful butterfly and very hungry children need healthy regular meals to reach their full potential.


1.    Design a poster for the foodbank asking for donations of items from the shopping list;
2.    Visit your local shop, supermarket, school or church and ask them if they will display your poster. 
3.    Read The Very Hungry Caterpillar together
4.    Make a junk caterpillar or a giant caterpillar for your meeting place

  
Session Two
FOOD AND COMMUNITY

Very few of us, here in the West at least can grow all the food we need in a year. We all depend on others to grow food for us. The food on our plates is produced by other human beings – it is an effort of human community.

Young People
1.     Calculate the cost of six items you eat regularly.   Could you buy these any cheaper by shopping differently – think about supermarket own brands, local shops, farmers markets.  Could you grow or make any of the items on your list yourself?  Would that change the cost?
2.    Choose one item to grow or make yourself to share with your friends – you can grow many things from seed in small containers.  Could you join together and start a vegetable patch?
3.    Think about the foods you throw away each day.  How could you use these foods rather than putting them in the bin? Research food waste in UK – how much is thrown away each day/week/year?


Children
1.    Collect empty food tins.  Before you remove the labels make a list of where each food comes from.  Clean and decorate them to use as growing containers.  Plant seeds in your tins and see what you can grow – carrots, radishes, salad leaves, cress.  When they have grown give them to someone you know to enjoy.
2.    Make a loaf of bread together - as members of the group mix and knead the bread dough, think and talk about these two questions: where does the bread we eat come from?  Who makes the bread and how does it get to our plates?

You will need to wash your hands before and after this activity!


Here is the recipe for a loaf of white bread:

500g white bread flour
1 sachet of fast action dried yeast
1 teaspoon of salt
1 tablespoon of olive oil
280 ml of warm water

Mix together the flour, salt and yeast in a large bowl. Pour in the olive oil and water and stir thoroughly. Knead vigorously for about five minutes. Cover with a clean damp cloth, and leave to rise until the dough is doubled in size.
The next part can be done by the leader at home:  This usually takes about an hour. Knead again, then shape it into a loaf and place in a loaf tin. Cover with the damp cloth, and leave it to rise again until doubled in size. Bake in a fairly hot oven (200 degrees C) for 30 minutes, or until the loaf sounds hollow when tapped.  Empty onto a wire cooling tray.
Bring the loaf back for next week’s session.



Session Three
FOOD AND FASTING AND PRAYER

Through the bible and in contemporary Christian traditions, fasting is both a spiritual and social practice of drawing closer to God and to our neighbour. It is in fasting that we discover the stranger in need and offer them our support. Our Lenten fast calls us to do the same.
Fasting is a near universal language of faith. For Jews, Muslims, Christians,
Buddhists and many of the traditions of the Indian subcontinent fasting, of varying degrees is practiced by each generation. In the Christian tradition it has been most associated with two seasons: Advent and Lent.

Young People:

1.     Make the Lenten Pretzel

The pretzel is a traditional Lenten food, in the shape of arms folded in prayer.

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 cups lukewarm water
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • 2 ¼ tsp active dry yeast
  • 4 cups plain flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • Coarse salt for topping (optional)
  • 1 egg, beaten

Directions:

  1. Add the honey to 1 1/2 cups warm water.
  2. Add the yeast and stir until dissolved.
  3. Add 1 tsp salt and stir until dissolved.
  4. Blend in the flour using a fork. When the dough begins to pull away from the bowl, lay it out on a hard surface and knead till smooth.
  5. Cut the dough into pieces… about the size of the palm of your hand.
  6. Roll each piece into “ropes” by hand, and then twist into pretzel shapes.
  7. Place the pretzels on lightly greased baking sheets
  8. Brush each pretzel with the beaten egg and sprinkle with salt.
  9. Bake at 425 F for 12 to 15 minutes or until golden brown.

2.    Think about these questions: What is your favourite food?  What food do you think you would find it hardest to live without? If you decided to fast and not eat those foods what would tempt you to eat them? How would you resist?  Think about Jesus time in the wilderness and the temptations he faced.  Does that change your answers?
3.    Say the Lord’s Prayer together and reflect on the words ‘give us this day our daily bread’.  What do you think that means? What is our daily bread?
Does God to take care of all your needs: spiritual, nourishment, shelter, and safety?

Children:
1.       As you share and eat from the loaf of bread that the group prepared during the last session think about these questions:
What is your favourite food?  What food do you think you would find it hardest to live without?
Say the Lord’s Prayer together when you have finished eating.
2.       Make a paper chain using purple paper.  Write a prayer or someone to pray for on each link of the chain.  Each day tear off one link and use the prayer on it in your own prayers.
3.      Share the story of Jesus in the wilderness.  Decorate plain stones with words from the story.



Session Four
FOOD AND POLITICS

The politics of food are both a global, national and local political issue. For many years now we have known that there is enough food in the world to feed everyone. It is often forgotten that food poverty and hunger affect young people in the UK.  Use your skills to tell people about the issues and how they affect you or other people your age.

Young People

1.    Write a prayer or ‘collect’ about food poverty or hunger. Collects normally have four parts:

1. An address that names who God is for us
2. A description of what God does – God’s action
3. A petition (something we ask for) related to who God is and what he does.
4. Giving God glory or asking in God’s name.

Make a prayer tree together to hang your prayers on.  Display it somewhere where everyone can see.
2.     Design a postcard about food poverty and hunger.  Write your own message about it and post to your local MP or to the Prime Minister.

Children

1.    Draw a picture postcard of a caterpillar and a butterfly.  Write a message about food poverty or hunger on the back and post it to your local MP or to the Prime Minister.
2.    Make a banner to show that food poverty or hunger affects children too.  Think about using the story of the Very Hungry Caterpillar as a theme for your banner.  Where could you display it? Would your school, church, supermarket or library display it for you?
Session Five
HEAVENLY FOOD
Jesus shared the Passover meal at the last supper with his friends.  Here he chose the bread and the wine to create a special meal to remember him by.

Young People
1.     Read the story of the Exodus (you could use the Godly Play version) and then recreate the Passover meal Seder plate for your group.

The Passover Seder Plate is a special plate containing six symbolic foods used during the Passover Seder. Each of the six items arranged on the plate have special significance to the retelling of the story of the Exodus from Egypt. The seventh symbolic item used during the meal—a stack of three matzot—is placed on its own plate on the Seder table.
The six items on the Seder Plate are:
§  Maror and Chazeret: Two types of bitter herbs, symbolizing the bitterness and harshness of the slavery which the Jews endured in Ancient Egypt. For maror, many people use freshly grated horseradish or whole horseradish root. Chazeret is typically romaine lettuce, whose roots are bitter-tasting.
§  Charoset: A sweet, brown, pebbly paste of fruits and nuts, representing the mortar used by the Jewish slaves to build the storehouses of Egypt.
§  Karpas: A vegetable other than bitter herbs, usually parsley but sometimes something such as celery or cooked potato, which is dipped into salt water at the beginning of the Seder.
§  Zeroa: A roasted lamb bone which was a lamb offered in the Temple in Jerusalem.
§  Beitzah: A hard boiled egg, symbolizing the festival sacrifice that was offered in the Temple in Jerusalem.

2.     Share the story of the last supper.  What would your special meal be if you were going to have a last supper with friends?  What items would you choose and why?


Children
1.    Share the story of the last supper.  Use your imagination to make a banner of what the last supper would have been like.  Use this banner in your church or meeting place to help promote End Hunger Fast.
2.    Make a collage to show your favourite meal.  What items would you choose and why?




Friday, 21 September 2012

University Blanket

As someone is going off to University I decided to make her a blanket for her bed. Something warm and snuggly to remind her of home.  One hundred and forty four crochet squares. Job done.

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Ballerinas



Two sweet little ballerina cardigans for two little ballerinas. Personalised with a flower and a butterfly - the flower is a really simple knitted one, just two rows. Had to try several patterns to find an easy butterfly. Rather than ribbon I opted for a knitted tie with crocheted buttonhole loop and a clear snap fasthner to make things easier for little hands and stressed mums. Hope they work!

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Coloured pasta



Found this idea on the wonderful Pinterest website. Its very easy to do but a bit smelly (not unpleasant though) and a bit messy. Ideally it needs to be done 24 hours in advance as the longer you leave the pasta the stronger the colours - especially for the bigger pasta shapes. Macaroni works really well and takes the colour quite quickly. It dries quickly but trust me using a hair dryer to speed up the process isn't a very bright idea..........

Now all I need to do is get the colour off my hands and try and work out how to stop the dog eating the bits that ended up on the floor!

How to....

Put a little surgical spirit in a zip lock type bag

add food colouring (mixing colours works too)

add pasta

seal and shake - leave to stand shaking/moving pasta around

drain liquid and leave to dry on baking paper or parchment