In 2010,  
                      ten million members of the Girl Guides Movement 
                      celebrated 100 years of World Guiding.
It was a group of girls who first planted the idea of Girl Guiding in the mind of the founder, Lord Robert Baden-Powell, more than 100 years ago, in 1909, when they demanded a place for girls at the Crystal Palace Boy Scout Rally. These girls were, in fact, the very first advocates for the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts – speaking out and challenging the norms and gender conventions of the time. The Guide Movement formally began in the UK in 1910. Since then Girl Guiding has been planted in the lives of millions of girls and young women.
It was a group of girls who first planted the idea of Girl Guiding in the mind of the founder, Lord Robert Baden-Powell, more than 100 years ago, in 1909, when they demanded a place for girls at the Crystal Palace Boy Scout Rally. These girls were, in fact, the very first advocates for the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts – speaking out and challenging the norms and gender conventions of the time. The Guide Movement formally began in the UK in 1910. Since then Girl Guiding has been planted in the lives of millions of girls and young women.
The Guiding 2010 Centenary consisted of celebrations around the world in which Girl Guides and Girl Scouts
 celebrated 100 years of the world Guide and Scout movement. It took 
place over three years, 2010-2012, reflecting the founding dates of many
 World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts member organisations. April 10, 2010 marked the Global 
Centenary 
                        Celebration Day. There were three Centenary Celebration Days. On 10 April each year, 
celebrations were held around the world under a unifying theme. The 
theme for 2010 was plant. The theme for 2011 was grow, and the theme for 2012 was share.
This was the 100th day of the 
100th year and Girl Guides around the world held centenary 
                        celebrations to 
                        commemorate this unique day. In Sri 
Lanka, 100 Girl Guides came together at Girl Guide Headquarters in 
Colombo to celebrate the centenary with a very 
                        special birthday cake, and the launching of a 
time 
                        capsule.
Happy Camping at the Centenary Friendship Circle …
The Centenary Friendship Circle is
 one of the many activities that have been organized by the Sri Lanka 
Girl Guides Association (SLGGA) to 
                        commemorate the centenary of World Guiding. The Centenary Friendship Circle will take place between the 
                        22nd and 27th of April 2010 in Nainamadama. One 
                        hundred participants from Malaysia, UK, and 
                        Sri Lanka will come together to discuss, in a fun-filled atmosphere, certain key aspects of Guiding and 
                        camping, as they plan out the future of the Movement and work towards 2020. The 
participants will consist of both Girl Guides and Girl Guide Leaders, 
and will present Girl Guides with a unique opportunity to get involved 
in decision making that will have an impact on the Guide programmes over the next decade.
Celebrating 100 years with Sri Lanka Girl Guides
'The
 Journey of a hundred friends,' saw more than a hundred girl guides of 
the Sri Lanka Girl Guide Association (SLGGA) travel from Hambantota to 
Jaffna by train and then bus in celebration of 100 years of World 
Guiding. The Guides and Senior Guides who took part in the event were 
from a mix of races and religions and from all parts of the country.
While 
the event helped build and cement bonds of friendship between the 
Guides, it also  provided these ‘Friends’ with the opportunity to assist
 the Disaster Management Committee of the SLGGA set up a fully equipped 
library for the J/Ampan American Mission Tamil Mixed School at 
Kudaththana, which was not rebuilt after the tsunami of 2004.
Last month almost 150 Guides 
left for Jaffna from Hambantota via Galle and Colombo by train and 
completed the latter part of the journey along the A9 by bus. On 
arriving at the Harriet Winslow Girls’ Home, Panditerruppu, which was to
 be the “base camp”, the girls were greeted by a typical Tamil welcome, 
with garlands of flowers and red tilakas on the foreheads.
The 
Guides divided themselves into teams, one team was assigned to paint 
murals on the school walls with the theme- girls worldwide say 
“Friendship Leads to Peace and Development”. The second team tidied 
classrooms, while the third team planted crotons. A fourth team set to 
work on the 14th Nana Piyasa Library; sorting books. The SLGGA reported 
that “it was very hard work, but with the support of the girls and boys 
of the school, the work was completed by evening.” Transport to the 
school was provided by the Sri Lankan Army.
The 
library was ceremonially opened by Addl. Provincial Director of 
Education and the Chief Commissioner in the presence of the principal, 
staff, school children and their parents, as well as the Guides and 
village dignitaries.
During 
the ceremony the Addl. Provincial Director of Education thanked the 
Association for its gesture and according to the SLGGA, the Chief 
Commissioner said that the best way to maintain the links between the 
school and the sponsors of the Library would be to start a Guide Company
 in the School; the Principal readily agreed to release a staff member 
to be trained as an adult leader.
The 
Guides spent the rest of the day visiting temples and kovils, and were 
invited for lunch by the  Nagapooshan Amman Hindu Kovil authorities. 
“When they boarded Train No. 4085 from Vavuniya at 3.30 a.m. for home, 
it was not the end of the Journey – it was a beginning”, claimed the 
SLGGA. “The friendships that were formed and the memories of time spent 
with girls of different religions and cultures will no doubt have a 
lasting effect on them.”
achieves article from
http://www.sundaytimes.lk Sunday September 19, 2010
Sunday September 19, 2010
Sunday 
    September 19, 2010 


 
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