Events

The Walk of Green Hope

A creative walk featuring poetry, Indian dance and hopeful thoughtsWith 6 million+ and Balbir Singh Dance Company. 

 

We will look closely at nature, listen to poetry that celebrates refugees who have come to Huddersfield, watch beautiful dancing set against the architecture of the park and explore words of hope. 

 

1pm-2pm Picnic with music, weather permitting 

2pm-3.30pm The creative walk, whatever the weather 

 

Meet by the Visitor Centre and Refreshment Rooms, near Beaumont Park Road entrance. 

 

6 million+ and Balbir Singh Dance Company have been working together for the past three years in Huddersfield on creative arts projects like Unmasking Pain and Wear and Share, that integrate refugees and local people in exciting ways. 

 

6 Million + delivers creative arts projects with an extended family of refugees and local communities. The organisation exchanges and expresses stories of the Holocaust, genocides and contemporary persecution at home and abroad, while challenging discrimination and working towards a kinder future. 

 

Balbir Singh Dance Company (BSDC) was founded by Balbir Singh MBE in 2005, creating a platform to bring Kathak and contemporary dance together. Based in Leeds, BSDC works across the UK and in internationally. Over time, the company’s projects have become far more than just performances: they are spaces of dialogue, transformation and healing. 

 

Sunday 17 May 

1pm-3.30pm 

Visitor Centre (meeting point), Beaumont Park, Beaumont Park Road, Huddersfield HD4 7AY 

Free (Booking required)

Age guidance: all ages (U16s should be accompanied by an adult) 

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Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.

We Came By Sea

Every day and every night when the sea was calm they came, and most days the newspapers and the websites said the same thing: ‘migrants’ in ‘small boats’ were crossing the English Channel. Rescuers were ‘overwhelmed’, coastal towns were ‘up in arms’. Over and over, the headlines and the photographs told us this story. 

 

But no story has only one side, as Horatio Clare discovered when he began his journeys between Dover and Calais, where he met and listened to the volunteers who help thousands of people every year, from the lifeboat crews mounting operations to the countless unrecognised, uncelebrated British people who are giving their all to help the vulnerable and desperate. 

 

We Came by Sea bears witness to hope and humanity. It is a journey through an unexamined nation – a nation which is every bit as great and good as the people in the dinghies believe it to be. This is not the story that we have been told, but it is a true story. 

 

Shortlisted for the Nero Book Awards 2025.  

 

Horatio Clare is a critically acclaimed author and journalist. His first book, Running for the Hills, won the Somerset Maugham Award. His second book, Truant, was heralded by The Irish Times as a ‘stunningly well-written memoir.’ A Single Swallow was shortlisted for the Dolman Travel Book of the Year while Down to the Sea in Ships won the Stanford-Dolman Travel Book of the Year in 2015. Horatio’s first book for children, Aubrey and the Terrible Yoot, won the Branford Boase Award for debut children’s book. He has written two books about mental health: Heavy Light and Your Journey Your Way. Previously with Little Toller books Horatio has published Orison for a Curlew and Something of his Art. He lives in West Yorkshire. 

 

Praise for We Came by Sea 

 

“I would read anything Horatio Clare wrote. His prose is always brilliant, and by turns funny, furious and heart-piercingly compassionate. He lights up – no, he scintillates – any subject that finds itself in receipt of the gift of his attention.”   

Robert Macfarlane 

 

“It feels comforting and right to have a writer of Clare’s skill turn attention to this topic, and he does not avoid referencing corruption and other wrongdoing by those in power.”  

Sally Hayden, The Irish Times 

 

“[Clare’s] job, executed wonderfully well, is to help us to think calmly and intelligently about those arriving in small boats, to consider giving them a chance and to recognise that we have more in common with them than we might imagine.”  

Maggie Fergusson, The Spectator 

 

Saturday 9 May 

2pm-3pm 

Attic, Lawrence Batley Theatre, Queen Street HD1 2SP 

£8 (£7 conc) free ticket for University of Huddersfield staff and students and essential carers accompanying a ticket holder.

Age guidance: 16+ 

Access Guide: https://www.thelbt.org/your-visit/access/  

Book tickets

Access: if you have specific access needs or seating preferences, please contact our Admin team at [email protected] with your request.

Concession & Carers: For further information on concession and essential carer tickets, please visit our FAQ’s page

Eventbrite note: When purchasing tickets please download the Eventbrite ‘app’ or ‘create an Eventbrite account’. This will facilitate quicker access to your tickets.