A CHARITY set up by the brother of a UK aid worker who was beheaded by terrorists has launched a poetry competition for school children to discuss unity.
Global Acts of Unity was set up by Mike Haines after the death of his brother David in September 2014.
The 44-year-old, from Perth in Scotland, was killed after being captured in Syria while working in a displaced persons camp.
The father-of-two was working for an aid agency when he was captured in March 2013 before being killed on camera.
His brother Mike set up the charity to promote peace and tolerance in schools across the country.
It is now running a competition for school pupils aged 11-18 to share in their own words what “unity” means to them.
On the charity’s website, Haines says: “I’ve been inspired by many young people on my journey but I want to hear from many more.
“That’s why we have created Words of Unity to invite students age 11-18, as the leaders of tomorrow, to add their powerful and unique voices to this call for unity, acceptance and understanding.
“I want to hear from students about what unity means to them.”
The winner of the competition will receive £100 of vouchers and £500 of supplies for their school community.
Entries can be “haikus to spoken word performances and from limericks to raps”, with a 400-word written or two-minute audio/video limit.
The deadline for the competition is February 28.
Haines, who now lives in Dundee and was made an OBE for his work in 2018, also spoke of his amazement “at the perceptive things the children say”.
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