21st World Scout Jamboree
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Categories: Articles with trivia sections from October 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since October 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since August 2007 | Scouting jamborees
The 21st World Jamboree was held in July and August of 2007, and formed a part of the Scouting 2007 Centenary celebrations of the World Scout Movement. The event was hosted by the United Kingdom, as 2007 marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of Scouting on Brownsea Island. The event was held for 12 days between the 27th of July and the 8th of August, in Hylands Park, Chelmsford, Essex. This site was selected because of the easy access to air and sea transport, and it is also near Gilwell Park, an important campsite and training centre for Scout Leaders. Over 38,000 Scouts and leaders from 158 countries which have a recognised National Scout Organization (recognition is conferred by membership in the World Organization of the Scout Movement) camped for the event, while over 50,000 others attended for day visits. There were also over 8600 members of the International Service Team who also came from all over the world.
PurposeImage:World Jamboree Site 016.jpg
Scouts from around the world at the 21st World Jamboree
The first jamboree was held in 1920, at Olympia, in the United Kingdom. Since then, the event has been held generally every four years, with a break between the 1937 and 1947 jamborees because of World War II, and also between the 1975 and 1983 events because of political instability in Iran. It has been hosted in many countries, although it has not yet taken place in Africa. The jamboree aims to promote adventure, international friendship, and the development of young people. The next Jamboree will be held in 2011 in Sweden. ParticipationImage:Wsj2007mainentrance.JPG
The main entrance to the 21st World Scout Jamboree
The event was open to all members of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) who are between the ages of 14 and 17 at the start of the Jamboree on July 27, 2007. Members of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) may have participated if the respective national WOSM member organization agreed. People who wished to attend must have been selected by their respective Scouting associations. Adults were able to participate in support roles as members of the International Service Team, National Contingent Support Teams, Troop Leaders, National Representatives, Off-Site Program Workers, or members of the Build Team. Day visitors of all ages were also welcomed to the event. However, the dates and the areas on which day visitors were able to visit were restricted to maintain park capacity limits. The event was the second largest ever Jamboree held with 38,074 participants and IST attending, but with more countries than ever before.[1], and more than 42,000 day visitors[2]. The 3rd 'Coming of Age' Jamboree in 1929 was the largest held, with 50,000 participants.[3] ThemeImage:Scouting 2007uniform.jpg
Centenary celebration badge, which can be worn on the uniforms of all active Scouts around the world
Each Jamboree has a theme, and the 2007 Jamboree's is "One World, One Promise". This motto is incorporated on the Centenary badge and is available in the local language of all Scouting organisations who are members of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. This motto is also included in the lyrics of the Jambo Song Factfile
AttractionsImage:21th World Scout Jamboree.jpg
Scouts During Opening Ceremonie.
Image:Wsj2007ferriswheel.jpg
A Ferris Wheel built by the Swedish contingent
Key attractions, events and facilitions included:[4]
SubcampsEach hub contained four subcamps each consisting of 2,000 Scouts with its own programme of activities. Within the subcamps each troop had 36 participants. The four hubs were:
The adult-only hub for IST members and other adults not affiliated with a Sub-camp or participant unit and has own programme of activities at first time:
PreparationsImage:Wsj2007centralclock.JPG
The central clock built from pioneering poles
Preparations for the event have included a smaller scale Jamboree, EuroJam 2005, where 12,000 Scouts, from across Europe, camped in the same location. This dry run allowed the planners of the Jamboree to test a number of aspects of the event, including the control of the massive influx of the contingents into the area. The food and supplies for the EuroJam event also set a world record for the largest single internet order to a supermarket, with deliveries being made in large articulated trucks. Scouts Shops Ltd, responsible for sourcing much of the equipment for the 21st World Jamboree, reported that the cost of steel on the world market increased as a result of the Jamboree placing its order.[5] International Service TeamThe International Service Team (IST) are Scouts aged 18 and above who help to build large-scale Scouting events, the most notable being World Scout Jamborees. There were over 8600 members of the IST at the 21st World Scout Jamboree, and they helped to build, run, take down and maintain the events, activities and services on the Jamboree site. The IST were split in to two main sections, with four sub-sections, depending on their interests and qualifications:
Including water, gas and electricity, the IST built and maintained the fifth largest city in Essex from a park in under a month.[citation needed] UK Contingent Pre-Event PartyThe entire UK contingent arrived one day before the rest of the world, and had a party on the Tropical Hub stage with performances from Liberty X and Lemar, along with Radio 1 DJ Jason King and CBBC TV presenter Anne Foy. Peter Duncan, UK Chief Scout, was also on the stage. ControversyThe day after the departure of the participants (8th of August) hundreds of IST members signed an open letter to the organisers in which they expressed that they felt, that the event was overall very commercialized and had less in common with traditional scouting, as they were no camp fires and almost every service had to be paid. The Jamboree Director (an unpaid volunteer post) Bill Cockroft commented "30,000 kids had fun, no?".[citation needed] After the Jamboree closed, it was revealed that thirteen Scouts had been reported missing to the British Police. All the organisations involved maintain there has been no crime committed, as all the scouts had visas, and are now only concerned for the Scouts' safety.[6] See alsoReferences
External links
de:21. World Scout Jamboree 2007 es:Jamboree del Centenario fr:Jamboree mondial de 2007 it:21° Jamboree mondiale dello scautismo hu:21. Cserkész Világdzsembori nl:21e Wereldjamboree ja:第21回世界スカウトジャンボリー fi:21. maailmanjamboree sv:21:a världsjamboreen vi:Trại Họp bạn Hướng đạo Thế giới lần thứ 21 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||


