Use these photos as an introduction to your assembly. Copy and paste the photo on to a power point and have it on display as the children enter the hall. Suggested discussion points are listed below each picture. See www.no-outsiders.com for more No Outsiders information
Monday, 29 March 2021
penguin
Monday, 22 March 2021
census
The first census in the UK was taken on 10 March 1801 and this year's census is the 22nd in UK history. The first record of a census in the UK was taken in 1086, ordered by William the Conqueror and called the Domesday book, however this census was more about land people owned than people who lived on it.
Today, the questions ask who lives in your house; their age, race, occupation, relationship status. People can also answer questions about any religion they may follow and this year for the first time ever people were able to say if they were LGBT.
For the first time, people over the age of 16 were able to answer a voluntary question, "is the gender you identify with the same as your sex registered at birth," and there was a follow up question asking people to specify their gender identity.
Campaigners have been asking for questions about LGBT identity to be included for the first time. Paul Martin said, "We want to encourage members of the LGBT+ community to be counted and to be proud to be included.... all of us filling in our census forms have a part to play in history - we are the first generation to be able to disclose our sexual orientation or gender identity and that's really exciting."
- what is a census, why do we have one?
- can you think of a famous bible story where two people take part in a census?
- why do you think the questions have changed since 1801?
- why do we need to know the race, age, sex of people living in each house? Do we need to know?
- why wouldn't people in the 1961 census have written down that they were gay? (it was illegal and they would have been sent to prison)
- what does that show about ideas and society changing over time?
- why are people saying it is important for people today to be able to say if they are LGBT?
- "is the gender you identify with the same as your sex registered at birth," what does this mean? what is the word for a person who identifies as a different gender to the sex they were registered at birth?
- "be counted and to be proud to be included." what does this mean? why is this important?
- how does the census help us learn about history?
- why is this about no outsiders?
Doll
Ian Harkin works for Lottie Dolls who made the doll and said, "It's extremely important kids get to play with a diverse toy box... and it's incredibly powerful for kids to be able to see a doll in their likeness."
- what is Downs Syndrome? (Down's Syndrome is something a person is born with which makes them look a bit different. A person with Down's Syndrome may need extra help to do some things because their body works in a different way but they still have their own personality, and things that make then who they are. It's just another way of being different. We are all different.)
- why is this the first time Rosie has a doll that looks like her? Why aren't there lots of dolls that look different?
-how do you think Rosie feels playing with a doll that looks like her for the first time?
- "It's really wonderful to see Down's Syndrome represented like this." what does this mean?
- "It's extremely important kids get to play with a diverse toy box" why?
- "It's incredibly powerful for kids to be able to see a doll in their likeness." why?
- what can we learn from Lottie Dolls?
- why is this story about No Outsiders?
Sunday, 7 March 2021
worship
Roland Stolte helped to start the project and said when the idea was firast suggested a few years ago, there were some fears about mixing religions or that peolpe were trying to make a new religion. But he says now people are changing their minds; “The idea is pretty simple. We wanted to build a house of prayer and learning where thesse three religions could co-exist while retaining their own identity.” Roland said, “We want others to join us.”
Rabbi Andreas Nachama said, “It is the start of a new era where we show there is no hate between us.”
Funding has come from the government and also from donations which are expected to make 8 million euros.
- Why do you think
the building is called a churmosqagogue?
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Why do you think
this is a new thing that has made the news?
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Why are the
organisers saying other faiths can also join?
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Why do you think
some people didn’t like the idea when it was first suggested?
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“three religions
could co-exist while retaining their own identity.” Why is retaining their own
identity important? Why don’t they all use the same room?
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“It is the start
of a new era where we show there is no hate between us.” Why has there been
hate?
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What does this
show about the world today and difference? (we can co-exist)
- What can we learn from this building?
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Why is this about
no outsiders?
Energy
Ummihani Hanif is an eight year old child in Year 4 in school in
Blackburn, UK. Recently Ummihani’s class were asked to write a short speech
with the title, “If I could change the world” and she chose to write a speech
about equality which has now gone viral.
You can watch Ummihani’s speech in the link above. Listen not only to the words, but also to how Ummihani says them. This was part of an oracy project.
In her speech Ummihani compares light bulbs to humans;
“We both are different colours, different shapes and different sizes.”
“We are both made in different places… some of us are clear and some are
broken.”
She then goes on to say the most important part of the lightbulb isn’t
its shape, but the energy running through it;
“In the same way there is a single energy running through each person on
this planet. It does not matter what you look like. It does not matter what
your race is. Gender – nationality – that’s just the bulb outside… inside is
who you really are – energy.”
“Energy is who we are and energy has no colour. Energy is not black or white. Energy is not Muslim, Christian or atheist. We are clever creative universal energies and if we understood that, we would finally know what wise men and women like Martin Luther King have been trying to tell us from the dawn of time. That we are one.”
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Why do you think Ummihani begins her speech with the line, “If I could
change the world..”
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What do you notice about the way Ummihani delivers her poem, how does
she use her voice?
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How do you think she is trying to make the audience feel?
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Why does she compare lightbulbs to humans?
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“there is a single energy running through each person on this planet” is
there? What does she mean?
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“It does not matter what you look like. It does not matter what your
race is. Gender – nationality – that’s just the bulb outside… inside is who you
really are – energy.” What does she mean by this?
-
“We are clever creative universal energies” what does this mean?
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Who was Martin Luther King and why do you think Ummihani mentions him?
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What can we learn from Ummihani?
Why is this about No Outsiders?