Application for the Buildings and Programs Grant are due on April 2. Don’t miss your chance to apply! [Read more…] about Apply for a Buildings and Programs Grant
News
What To Do If ICE Shows Up at Your Quaker Meeting | PYM | Updated on March 19, 2026
Originally Published Feb 12, 2025 - Updated on March 19, 2026
We are a community rooted in worship and in peace and justice. It is important for Quaker Meetings to be prepared if Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or other law enforcement officials arrive at a Meetinghouse. This guide outlines steps to protect vulnerable individuals and uphold our values of sanctuary and solidarity.
Announcing the new Quakers Ending Mass Incarceration Collaborative
We are pleased to announce the formation of the Quakers Ending Mass Incarceration Collaborative (QEMIC).
In this Collaborative (our webpage will hopefully be live very soon), we will seek to reduce mass incarceration, reduce its effects on people who are incarcerated and their families, and assist those recently released from incarceration in their transition back into society. We will engage in the education of Friends and community members regarding how the current carceral system operates, both systemically and at the individual level. [Read more…] about Announcing the new Quakers Ending Mass Incarceration Collaborative
Furniture and Items from Friends General Conference
Friends General Conference (FGC) is getting its Arch Street office ready for sale. The organization is looking for homes for most of its furniture and supplies. Before attempting to sell the items, Friends General Conference is offering them for free to Friends’ meetings, organizations, and schools if the items are picked up at 1216 Arch Street. [Read more…] about Furniture and Items from Friends General Conference
Robert Best and Sharing Messages Through Signs
Robert Best, an attender of Chestnut Hill Friends Meeting can be found in Center City Philadelphia, near the plaza across from the Clothespin sculpture every Wednesday between 12:00 and 1:30. Robert stands there with a tall pole and a set of signs. [Read more…] about Robert Best and Sharing Messages Through Signs
Swarthmore Meeting Statement on ICE
Our Call to End and Reform Unjust Immigration Enforcement Practices and Laws
APPROVED by Swarthmore Monthly Meeting 2/8/26
As people of faith who are convinced that the Divine dwells within every human being, we feel called to bear witness to the profound harms of current immigration enforcement practices in the United States. These actions, and the current government that supports them, are in opposition with a spiritual truth we hold sacred: that every person is inherently endowed with dignity and worth.
Through unjust and harmful immigration enforcement practices and laws, often violently carried out by masked federal agents, our government is damaging communities, separating children from their parents, and tearing apart the bonds of family. This leaves wounds that can endure for generations. Current immigration enforcement often singles out communities for traumatic action based on race, creed, and national origin, and too often strips away basic rights and protections without due process Many are thereby forced into conditions of persecution, oppression, poverty, and even death—within and beyond their home countries—sometimes through detention practices and foreign prisons where torture has been reported. Now non-violent protesters, too, are being subjected to violence and even murder. Such enforcement practices sow fear and spread trauma through our communities, violating human dignity, fundamental rights, and often the laws of our country. We are also deeply concerned that these actions conflict with our nation’s commitments under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention Against Torture, and the Refugee Convention and its Protocol—commitments that speak to our shared responsibility to protect human dignity and uphold the right to seek asylum. Federal agents must obey our laws regarding who can be stopped or detained, and how and why this can be done, as well as people’s rights before and when detained. Federal agents cannot be allowed to ignore or alter these laws as they choose. In addition, we are concerned that federal facilities are unsafe and inhumane, and they regularly refuse to admit members of our government responsible for their oversight.
Guided by faith and conscience, we affirm that human laws should serve the well-being and dignity of persons and communities. When laws and their enforcement produce widespread suffering, division, and despair, we believe people of faith have a responsibility to examine those laws and practices honestly, to speak the truth as we are given to see it, and to labor for reform—through prayer, public witness, and nonviolent action.
We do not claim moral perfection, but we do feel called to participate faithfully in the continuing work to make our nation more just, with humility, courage, and a commitment to nonviolence. Compelled by our commitment to hospitality, and by enduring spiritual teachings to welcome the stranger and to love our neighbors as ourselves, we urge faith communities and people of conscience to rise courageously alongside immigrants facing persecution and harm. We call for swift legal reform and for an immediate end to unjust and oppressive enforcement practices. Together, let us labor to build a beloved community where the human and civil rights of immigrants are honored, protected, and upheld. In this endeavor, we affirm the Divine presence within each person and the spiritual truth upon which our faith—and our shared humanity—depend. We are eager to join with other communities and people of faith and conscience who feel led to work together for a peaceful and just society.
With hope,
Swarthmore Friends Meeting
National Council of Churches Opposes Unauthorized Military Aggression in Iran: Violence Cannot Bring Peace | Press Release
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting is a member of the National Council of Churches (NCC), a coalition of faith communities that works together on issues that affect people facing hardship. Through this affiliation, Philadelphia Yearly Meeting stays connected with other churches and shared efforts that reach beyond our region.
The NCC began in the 1950s and represents a wide network in the United States, often described as serving about 45 million people across more than 100,000 congregations. This shared fellowship gives Philadelphia Yearly Meeting another way to engage alongside other faith communities on matters of national concern.
Recently, the National Council of Churches released this press release titled “NCC Opposes Unauthorized Military Aggression in Iran: Violence Cannot Bring Peace.” [Read more…] about National Council of Churches Opposes Unauthorized Military Aggression in Iran: Violence Cannot Bring Peace | Press Release
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Staff Attend Founders’ Day at Cheyney University
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting staff attended the 189th Founders’ Day Celebration at Cheyney University, where they were welcomed in a spirit of partnership and mutual thriving. Founders’ Day honors Cheyney’s roots as the first Historically Black College or University (HBCU) in the United States and its enduring legacy of Black excellence. [Read more…] about Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Staff Attend Founders’ Day at Cheyney University
Quaker Scouts? Yep… | The Friends Committee on Scouting
This story is attributed to The Friends Committee on Scouting
The Religious Society of Friends sponsors awards that Scouting America, (used to be named Boy Scouts), Girl Scouts, Girl Guides and Campfire members may earn. These awards are intended as a means for the young boy or girl to learn about their faith and be recognized for their accomplishment. They have also been used as curriculum for First Day classes. The awards are not “official” SA/BSA or GSUSA awards, but are approved to wear on the uniform. They were created by Friends for our young Scouts. [Read more…] about Quaker Scouts? Yep… | The Friends Committee on Scouting
Confronting Global Conflict Through Finance | Friends Fiduciary Corporation
This article is attributed to Ethan K. Birchard is the Executive Director of Friends Fiduciary Corporation.
With geopolitical instability on the rise, in recent years global conflicts have continued to grow. A year ago, the Washington Post reported that 30 percent more people were killed in violent conflict in 2024 than in 2023, with conflict at its highest level since World War II. In 2026, despite the ceasefire in Gaza and the ongoing stalemate in Ukraine, stability seems, if anything, more elusive than ever. The US administration’s actions around South America and rhetoric over Greenland have only added to that tension. [Read more…] about Confronting Global Conflict Through Finance | Friends Fiduciary Corporation









