THE GUARDIAN šŸ”µ ā€˜He champions the sense of belongingā€™: Dwayne Fields named as UK chief scout – Shango Media
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THE GUARDIAN šŸ”µ ā€˜He champions the sense of belongingā€™: Dwayne Fields named as UK chief scout

The Scouts have announced Dwayne Fields, the first black Briton to reach the north pole, as the UKā€™s new chief scout.

Fields, a TV presenter, explorer and naturalist, is the first person of colour to lead the organisation, which has half a million young members and adult volunteers.

He will succeed the TV star Bear Grylls, who was appointed in 2009, aged 34, making him the youngest chief scout at the time.

The Scouts said a key part of Fieldsā€™ mission would be to attract new volunteers, especially in communities new to the group.

Fields, who has been an ambassador for the Scouts since 2017, will be visiting these areas and ā€œencouraging and inspiring teams to grow the movementā€.

Fields was formally invested as chief scout on Thursday at Scout Park in north-east London, where he spent time in Cub scouts as a child.

He said: ā€œScouts helped shape who I am today and I hope my story will encourage others to join and achieve their dreams.

ā€œMy volunteer leaders believed in me as a young person and taught me to believe in myself. They showed me I could do anything I put my mind to and others would help me along the way.

ā€œNow I want a new generation to learn the skills for life, friendship and belonging I felt when I needed them most. I want to show that the outdoors is a place for all of us to be at our best and truly open to all.ā€

His appointment comes two years after the Scouts launched its vision for race equity to improve the ethnic diversity of the membership, volunteers and leadership.

The report noted that people from Black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds comprise only 8% of the Scoutsā€™ membership, a significantly lower proportion than in the UK population (14%). It added that ā€œfor some members, negative experiences have led them to feel Scouts isnā€™t a place for themā€.

Carl Hankinson, the UK chief volunteer at the Scouts, said of Fields: ā€œHe champions the sense of belonging Scouts gives young people. He is able to reach across generations, to further expand reach across all communities.ā€

Born in Jamaica, Fields came to the UK at the age of six. Growing up in inner-city London, he became a victim of both knife and gun crime, and also lacked access to nature. But he was offered ā€œnew horizonsā€ with the Scouts, according to the group.

When he joined as a Cub scout, membership of his local pack gave him ā€œfriendships, skills, belief in himself and hope for his futureā€.

He went on to become the first black Briton to reach the north pole in 2013 and has gone on to have a successful career in adventure and TV, presenting shows on Channel 5, Disney+ and National Geographic.

Sophia Sanyahumbi, a 17-year-old Explorer scout from south London, said she thought Fields was ā€œdetermined to make a difference to young peopleā€™s lives through scoutingā€.

A Scouts spokesperson said: ā€œWe have close to 150,000 adult volunteers. We are working towards at least 5% of our volunteers to be from Black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds and are currently standing at 3.8%.

ā€œWe are planning pilots to focus on scouting in Black communities and build connections with those communities.ā€

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