Umbrellas for Peace
‘The Lamb Umbrellas for Peace Project is a global art
project involving painting and decorating umbrellas by children and
adults. The individual will artistically design umbrellas that
represent their personal values of world peace. A subsequent parade
happens throughout their neighborhoods or campus. This is a
manifestation of the individual bringing peace throughout their
world that they live in.
The Umbrellas for Peace project aims to embed the message of
peace, tolerance, understanding, hope and love throughout the
world. Its goal is to protect against aggression and war by
generating peaceful intercultural and multilateral
communications.
Lamb Umbrellas For peace have been conducted in:
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Czech Republic, France,
Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Israel/Palestine, Japan, Lithunia,
Luxemburg, Panama, Poland, Slovenia, Russia, Singapore, Spain,
United Kingdom, USA, Thailand and Vietnam.’
See http://www.the-lamb-umbrellas-for-peace.org/
for more information.
Low Moor Primary School is a larger than average
sized school. The majority of children are from White British
families; a few are of minority ethnic heritage of which some are
learning English as an additional language. The proportion of
pupils who have learning difficulties and/or disabilities is below
average.
Marshfield Primary School
serves a diverse ethnic community in an area of above average
social and economic deprivation. It is a much larger than the
average primary school and the numbers attending are rising. A very
large majority of pupils are of Asian British origin. An increasing
number of refugees and asylum seekers, many of whom do not speak
English as a first language, are also attending the school. The
proportion of pupils with learning difficulties and/or disabilities
is average.
Low Moor
Primary School and Marshfield Primary School work with their year 4
classes on a year-long rolling project. This year their project was
based on Lamb’s Umbrellas for Peace. They explored their own
identities through poetry writing ‘I am’ poems and sending them to
each other before meeting. This opened up many deeper conversations
about the diversity of the city. It also created opportunities for
the children to explore their similarities, to put them at ease, in
preparation for meeting. They then used their meetings to explore
their hopes and fears.
Following this they met at Cartwright Hall Art Gallery in
Bradford where they engaged in a workshop to paint on an umbrella
with a partner, using the outside to represent their hopes and the
inside to represent their fears.
The
umbrellas were exhibited in July 2009 at Bradford University to
coincide with a visit from Matt Lamb to the Peace Studies
Department. Many children visited the exhibition with parents to
celebrate their work.
The aims of Lamb’s Umbrellas for Peace fit well within the aims
of Schools Linking Network as the project enabled two diverse
communities to come together and celebrate their identities and the
diversity within the group. The project provided space to explore
equality and a platform for the children’s voices to be heard,
expressing their hopes for their future and the future of the
community in which they all live.
I am
I am a Muslim boy who loves playing
football.
I wonder if I will go back to Leicester to
see my grandparents.
I feel the winter chill on my
nose.
I smell my grandma cooking
samosas.
I hear the children of my school
singing.
I am a Muslim boy who loves playing
football.
I pretend that I am playing for Manchester
United.
It touches my heart when people are nice
to me.
I worry about the poverty in the
world.
It makes me cry when I fall over and cut
myself.
I am a Muslim boy who loves playing
football.
I know for sure I will be a good
footballer.
I always say “please” and “thank
you”.
I dream of being a footballer.
I try to be kind to people.
I am a Muslim boy who loves playing
football.
Year 4 boy
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