Please join Kasia and Anne for a special SAFE community care session on 11th September at 19.00 CET
Supporting Abortions for Everyone – SAFE is proud to present this community care workshop.
Together, we will create a safe and brave space to explore issues relating to burn out, share resources and practical tools to support you and your groups recognize and address burn out, whilst fostering a community of collective care that will help regenerate your activism.
This training is comprised of what Anne and Kasia have learned via their lived experience as frontline activists, as well as key takeaways from their recent participation in a week long course on Regenerative Activism facilitated by the ULEX Project.
About your trainers:
Anne Quesney is a feminist activist and campaigner with a passion for organising and movement building. She has over 25 years’ experience of working and volunteering for reproductive and gender justice organisations, including Abortion Rights (UK), MSI Reproductive Choices, Action Aid UK and S.A.F.E.; and founded London Feminista - an intersectional feminist blog and city guide. Having engaged with activists at local, national and global level has revealed the extent and impact of burn out on individuals and groups, and the need to prioritise collective care, resilience and joy. She looks forward to sharing learnings from ULEX’s Regenerative Activism Course.
Kasia Roszak-ten Hove is a co-creator of Abortion Network Amsterdam, a founding member of Abortion Without Borders, and co-founder of Supporting Abortions for Everyone (S.A.F.E.). She also co-created S.A.F.E.’s Abortopedia, a living online resource for abortion activists. Kasia has worked alongside movements, offering training, facilitation, and support to help groups collaborate in healthier, more sustainable ways. Her experiences with the TROS-KA Wellbeing Ambassadorship course, offered by Fundacja RegenerAkcja, and the Regenerative Activism Course at Ulex deepened her passion for resilience, helping activists feed their energy, prevent burnout, and sustain their movements for the long run.