Keeping Faith: A How To Guide

Women's Interfaith Network

Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide explores how women keep faith - in ourselves, in each other, in a cause, or in religious faith - so you can learn how to keep faith too. Each episode, we’ll be interviewing a different guest, some names you know and some you should know, to find out what keeping faith means to them.  Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide is a podcast from Womens' Interfaith Network, a women’s charity bringing together all faith’s and none, as part of our 2024 Keeping Faith Programme. Find out more at https://www.wominet.org.uk/Hosted by Maeve CarlinProduced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne. Logo designed by Jasey Finesilver Podcast support from Tara Corry

  1. 10/28/2025

    Keeping Faith: A New Book From Women's Interfaith Network

    Can harnessing our creativity become its own act of resistance? What does it mean to keep faith in justice in unjust times? And can one person really make a meaningful difference? This week, WIN is launching our new book of women’s writing, ‘Keeping Faith: 20 Years of Women's Interfaith Network’, a collection of essays reflecting on how we keep faith in what matters to us in a world where faith feels hard to find. Our authors include faith leaders, artists, activists, leaders from across the voluntary and community sector, members of our WIN community, and voices of all faiths and no faith. This book celebrates 20 years of Women's Interfaith Network at a time where interfaith work feels more vital than ever before. In this episode, you’ll hear extracts and short interviews from four of our authors – zine artist Ioana Simion (Artizine UK), Rabbi Daisy Bogod, Reverend Helen Burnett, and Josephine Namusisi Riley from Citizens UK's Parent Action - who share their insights on Keeping Faith in Justice, Keeping Faith in Creativity, Keeping Faith in Activism and Keeping Faith in Community. Find out more about Keeping Faith: 20 Years of Women's Interfaith NetworkGet your own copy by emailing info@wominet.org.ukKeeping Faith: A How-To Guide was created as part of Women’s Interfaith Network's 2024-2025 Keeping Faith Programme. Read more about the programme here and be the first to hear about upcoming events and ways to get involved by signing up to our newsletter. Views expressed on this podcast are the speaker’s own and may not reflect the views of Women’s Interfaith Network. Hosted by Maeve Carlin Produced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne Logo and Artwork designed by Jasey Finesilver Support from Tara Corry

    37 min
  2. 09/10/2025

    Keeping Faith on the Frontline with Mariia Korolchuk

    Content Warning – This episode references Gender-Based Violence, including sexual abuse, as well as mental health issues such as depression, anxiety, and disordered eating. Please listen with care. How has the war in Ukraine created a ‘gender crisis’ for Ukranian communities, both at home and those displaced around the world? What does it mean to keep faith in humanitarianism when a new political administration can transform the sector overnight? And what lessons can we learn about hope and resilience from the stories of women on the frontlines of the humanitarian response? In this episode, we spoke to Mariia Korolchuk, who transitioned into the humanitarian sector after she was displaced to Romania from her home in Ukraine in 2022. Mariia, who now works as Vice President of the Malva Association – a hub for the Ukranian community in Bucharest – has worked for multiple NGOS over the last 3 years, with a particular focus on tackling gender-based violence and empowering women and girls. This is a raw, moving discussion of the realities of long-term conflict and displacement, as well as how women working on the frontlines of these crises continue to keep faith together. Cook Mariia's recipe for dranykiFind out more about how Mariia and her humanitarian colleagues are helping displaced Ukranian women access reproductive healthcareRead more about WIN's Food and Friendship projectKeeping Faith: A How-To Guide was created as part of Women’s Interfaith Network's 2024-2025 Keeping Faith Programme. Read more about the programme here and be the first to hear about upcoming events and ways to get involved by signing up to our newsletter. Views expressed on this podcast are the speaker’s own and may not reflect the views of Women’s Interfaith Network. Hosted by Maeve Carlin Produced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne Logo and Artwork designed by Jasey Finesilver Support from Tara Corry

    42 min
  3. 06/12/2025

    Keeping Faith in Creativity with Ada Jusic

    How can art help us tell important stories that all too often go unheard? What would it look like to truly value and prioritise creativity in our communities? And how do we keep faith in welcome for migrants and refugees, against the backdrop of hostile and divisive rhetoric? In this episode, we spoke to multi-disciplinary artist Ada Jusic, the illustrator behind the graphic novel The Power of Welcome: bringing to life her own journey from Bosnia to the UK as a young child alongside the stories of her co-authors from Somalia, Afghanistan, Syria and Ukraine. We discuss the importance of age-appropriate conversations about migration with children and young people in a world of widespread misinformation, as well as how she brings her life-long passion for artistic self-expression into the community. Follow Ada on Instagram or XFind out more about Ada's work on her websiteRead Ada's article for Barbed Wire Fever: To Be Heard is To Be LovedKeeping Faith: A How-To Guide was created as part of Women’s Interfaith Network's 2024-2025 Keeping Faith Programme. Read more about the programme here and be the first to hear about upcoming events and ways to get involved by signing up to our newsletter. Views expressed on this podcast are the speaker’s own and may not reflect the views of Women’s Interfaith Network. Hosted by Maeve Carlin Produced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne Logo and Artwork designed by Jasey Finesilver Support from Tara Corry

    23 min
  4. 04/08/2025

    Keeping Faith In Each Other with Paulina Tamborrel (Citizens UK)

    How do we bridge the gap between the world as it is and the world as we believe it should be? Can the arts help communities move through trauma to work for social change? And after a year of asking women from across communities what keeping faith means to them, how are we keeping faith ourselves in 2025? In the last episode of this series of Keeping Faith: A How To Guide, we spoke to Community Organiser Paulina Tamborrel, Head of Migrant and Refugee Organising at Citizens UK and Trustee at arts non-profit Creating Ground. Our conversation ranged from the lasting legacy of the Summer 2024 riots, how Paulina’s own migration journey shapes her approach as an organiser and what it means to ‘keep faith’ as someone working with communities now bearing the brunt of divisive rhetoric. Follow Paulina on LinkedIn or X Keep up with Citizens UK's latest campaigns on Facebook, Instagram and X.  Find out more about the Coalition of Latin Americans in the UK (CLAUK) and Citizens UK's project with Kings College London Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide was created as part of Women’s Interfaith Network's 2024-2025 Keeping Faith Programme. Read more about the programme here and be the first to hear about upcoming events and ways to get involved by signing up to our newsletter. Views expressed on this podcast are the speaker’s own and may not reflect the views of Women’s Interfaith Network. Hosted by Maeve Carlin Produced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne Logo and Artwork designed by Jasey Finesilver Support from Tara Corry

    43 min
  5. 03/12/2025

    Keeping Faith Together with Dr. Debbie-Weekes Bernard (London's Deputy Mayor for Social Justice and Communities)

    Content Warning: This episode contains discussions of gender-based violence, including femicide. Please listen with care.   How did the pandemic shine new light on the role of faith and interfaith groups in the voluntary sector? What does it mean to have ‘intersectional’ conversations about women’s safety? Can looking back at periods of tension and division from our past give us hope to challenge hate in our present? In this special episode for International Women’s Day, we spoke to London’s Deputy Mayor for Communities and Social Justice Dr. Debbie Weekes-Bernard, who shares her journey from the charity sector to City Hall, her first-hand experience of how women are driving interfaith dialogue in the capital, and what it means to ‘keep faith’ amidst the rise of the far-right.  Follow Dr. Debbie Weekes-Bernard on LinkedIn, X and Instagram. Read more about the Loved and Wanted Campaign and London’s Violence Reduction Unit.  Find out more about Women’s Interfaith Network’s grassroots women's groups and our wide-ranging projects.  Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide was created as part of Women’s Interfaith Network's 2024-2025 Keeping Faith Programme. Read more about the programme here and be the first to hear about upcoming events and ways to get involved by signing up to our newsletter. Views expressed on this podcast are the speaker’s own and may not reflect the views of Women’s Interfaith Network. Hosted by Maeve Carlin Produced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne Logo and Artwork designed by Jasey Finesilver Support from Tara Corry

    35 min
  6. 01/28/2025

    Keeping Faith in The Future with Dianne Danquah (The Equality Trust)

    What do young activists want us to know about the issues that matter to them? What impact is systemic inequality having on their lives and communities? How do we all keep faith in the future, while also creating spaces to voice our fears and uncertainty? In this episode, we speak to Dianne Danquah – a Young Equality Campaigner with The Equality Trust and one of the voices behind their Reconstructing the Social Contract project - who shares her journey into activism, what meaningful representation means to her, and how she finds a way to keep faith in the future when faith feels hard to find.  You can find out more about the Young Equality Campaigners and watch the short film they created on Reconstructing the Social Contract here.  Follow The Equality Trust on Instagram, Facebook and X (Formerly Twitter).  Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide was created as part of Women’s Interfaith Network's 2024-2025 Keeping Faith Programme. Read more about the programme here and be the first to hear about upcoming events and ways to get involved by signing up to our newsletter. Views expressed on this podcast are the speaker’s own and may not reflect the views of Women’s Interfaith Network. Hosted by Maeve Carlin Produced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne Logo and Artwork designed by Jasey Finesilver Support from Tara Corry

    25 min

About

Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide explores how women keep faith - in ourselves, in each other, in a cause, or in religious faith - so you can learn how to keep faith too. Each episode, we’ll be interviewing a different guest, some names you know and some you should know, to find out what keeping faith means to them.  Keeping Faith: A How-To Guide is a podcast from Womens' Interfaith Network, a women’s charity bringing together all faith’s and none, as part of our 2024 Keeping Faith Programme. Find out more at https://www.wominet.org.uk/Hosted by Maeve CarlinProduced by Maeve Carlin and Adam Brichto Edited by Adam Brichto Executive Produced by Lady Gilda Levy Theme music composed by Jamie Payne. Logo designed by Jasey Finesilver Podcast support from Tara Corry