Quaker Voluntary Service expanded to Boston as its fourth location in August 2015.
Sponsoring Quaker Meetings/Churches:
The QVS Boston program is under the care of Friends Meeting at Cambridge, Beacon Hill, Fresh Pond, Framingham Friends Meeting, and Wellesley Monthly Meetings.
Want to get involved with the Boston QVS program? Reach out to Zenaida, our Boston Coordinator.
Zenaida Peterson (they/them)
Boston Coordinator
Boston Fellows 2024-2025 (click on any picture for more information)
2024-2025 Boston Site Placements (click on any logo for more information)
Most Recent Blog Posts from QVS Boston
#QVSBOS- On Covenant “A Living Document”
…It just turns out that it’s hard to have eight people actually write a document together; and even harder when you feel like you have to capture an incredibly vibrant, dynamic, loving, energetic, thoughtful, and complex set of “norms” on paper. So we’re still plugging along, and hope to actually have a more-or-less “finished” version in a week or two (in fact, I’m supposed to be working on a draft right now, and instead am writing this.) And all along, we’ve told ourselves that whatever we produce will be a “living document,” so it may never feel finalized…
#QVSBOS- A Note on Simple Living
“The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak.”
– Hans Hoffman
Recently a few housemates and I decided to go on a brief sugar cleanse. We decided on our general guidelines (no added sweeteners, but natural sugars are fine), a timeline (shooting for 3 weeks), and made a little group text for support. Although I didn’t even think I’d been eating much sugar before starting the cleanse, the first day was hard. The craving began immediately as I walked into the kitchen that morning, and my plain oatmeal didn’t do much to satisfy it…
Announcing 2017-18 Site Placement Organizations
Who are we partnering with this year? From sites we've worked with for years like the Nationalities Service Center--working on immigrant and refugee rights issues, to brand new sites like Urban Gleaners-- which addresses hunger by redistributing healthy food to folks...