Training and Selection Day

Training and Selection Day

The Training and Selection Day is the second part of the training process to becoming a Yarl's Wood Befriender.

By Beyond Detention

Date and time

Sat, 18 Jan 2020 09:30 - Sat, 27 Feb 2021 16:00 GMT

Location

MK40 2AA

Bromham Road Bedford MK40 2AA United Kingdom

About this event

The Training and Selection Day is the second part of the training process to becoming a Yarl's Wood Befriender, and is only open to those who have previously attended an information session. 

At the Training & Selection Day, you will find out more about the befriending role and what you can expect whilst visiting someone being detained indefinitely at Yarl's Wood IRC.   

Some of the topics to be covered will be:  

  • Active listening 

  • Mental health of detainees 

  • Victims of trafficking 

  • Victims of torture 

  • Boundaries  

You will be provided with lunch, and tea and coffee throughout the day. If you have any dietary requirments, please email them to info@ywbefrienders.org.  Once you have booked your place you will receive more information via email which will include your application form, notes on the training process and information about joint visits to the centre. Please ensure that this information is returned to us before the training and selection day.   Please be at the office for a prompt 10am start and if you have any further questions then please call 01234 272090. Parking is avaliable in the carpark behind the building off Union Street.   

PLEASE NOTE DUE TO COVID 19 THIS SESSION MAY BE MOVED ONLINE VIA ZOOM

If you'd like to join our mailing list please visit https://mailchi.mp/e37d5641f121/mailinglist 

Organised by

We are a small charity based in Bedford, which aims to minimise the isolation and improve the well-being of people detained at Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre, in Bedfordshire, and to continue that support when they leave detention.

Detainees can be vulnerable, isolated and frightened. Many are young, some speak no English, and a number of them know no-one in this country. Whether a detainee has recently arrived in the UK or has been here for many years, the experience of detention can be traumatic. They are held for an indefinite period of time, and understand little about the legal system.

Our volunteers undertake to visit a detainee regularly, listening and caring about what happens to them. In this way, although we cannot affect the outcome of their case, we can help to reduce their isolation, acting as a contact with the outside world. 

We can assist with small practical needs, such as toiletries, second-hand clothing, mobile credit, and small grants of money to destitute people being removed (deported).

We are non-religious and non-political and are funded entirely by non-governmental grants and personal donations, enabling us to remain completely independent. 

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