![](https://SOULREST.ORG/image/75.jpg)
WEIGHT: 60 kg
Bust: 38
1 HOUR:140$
Overnight: +80$
Sex services: 'A' Levels, Fetish, Games, Receiving Oral, Role playing
Everyone followed the recent Calais demolitions. Others โ they were concerned for the safety of vulnerable people. For some students at Durham, however, the demolitions were more than just a news story. We volunteered with the Care4Calais charity, reporting to their warehouse each day. We worked for about 3 hours before having a break for lunch and deciding roles for the afternoon. These roles included container where we distributed aid from a container based in the camp , and art or English classes where we set up reading, writing and drawing supplies on blankets in the camp, and invited refugees to take part in casual lessons based on their own needs.
Both jobs were centred on giving the people in the camp some entertainment โ these people have not been granted citizenship so are not allowed to work, and their days can be very dull. A factor that was pressed on us by the Care4Calais team all volunteers themselves was that we give these people some dignity โ we cannot personally help them escape the squalor in the camp, but we can help them by providing supplies via donations, or giving them some fun.
Just chatting helped relieve their boredom, and every two weeks Care4Calais held a Sports Day, which a lot of the refugees looked forward to. Each day I was in the camp there were streams of people taking part in lessons and more people than we had donations for queuing to collect them โ some people queued for 2 hours or more, yet had to go home empty handed.
Something that really struck me was how kind these people were โ even though they had queued for so long, they were willing to let children and ill or injured people skip the queue. One night the volunteers stayed in the camp to eat at one of the restaurants run by refugees. The food was amazing and it was wonderful to see how a few people living in cramped and dirty tents could make a tarpaulin tent so welcoming and hospitable, and to make a communal space where people can meet and try to have fun.
I have certainly learnt to be more appreciative of what I have and where I live โ everyone I met spoke of England and London with longing as if it is a utopia, yet we complain all the time. To keep up to date with Durham for Refugees and get involved, like the Facebook page or follow durhamrefugees on Twitter and Instagram.