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Pembrokeshire Gig
The Pembrokeshire Gig Association  
Registered Charity  No. 1034969
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Atlantic Challenge International
"This was one of the most valuable segments of my life.." -Atlantic Challenge crew member.
Purposes
We are an international experiential education organization operating in many nations. Atlantic Challenge International programs practice, share, and encourage the rise of the skills of the sea including boat building, sailing, rowing, and seamanship. Its activities bring youth together with the intent of fostering cultural and global understanding.
We aim to encourage and stimulate:
interest in our rich maritime heritage
international friendship and exchange between member nations
community building and responsibility
personal development through challenge
perseverance and self reliance
initiative and creativity
The spirit of adventure
Kurt Hahn
The “roots” of the Atlantic Challenge movement come from the teachings of Kurt Hahn (1886-1974), one of  the twentieth century’s greatest educators. Hahn firmly
believed in the value of experiential education and thatself discovery comes through challenge. David Byatt, Atlantic Challenge International Trustee from the UK, had the good fortune to be educated by Hahn in the late 40’s, and to teach at Hahn’s school, Gordonstoun, for over twenty years.

David has this to say about Kurt Hahn:  “In this sheltered age when we in the
Western world live life shielded from the challenges of nature, we do not develop
our  talents for dealing with situations to the degree that our fore-fathers did .......
Most of the western population lives in towns and cities and all the basic needs of
life are  provided without effort, thus removing the challenge of living. Young people
seek a challenge in life and if it is not at hand, they go out and seek it, often with
damaging consequences to themselves or to others.

Hahn felt that the way to satisfy this desire for a challenge and to meet it in a harmless and formative way was to send young people out into the hills and onto the sea so that they might be challenged by the forces of nature and learn to meet with them and treat them with respect. In so doing they would learn about themselves and their fellows at the same time”.

Although Hahn himself was not a recreational sailor, he understood what experience at sea could do for those who ventured forth, and who are challenged and developed as a result. He used to describe the Moray Firth, where he sent boys sailing from Gordonstoun, as his best schoolmaster, because it was unforgiving of mistakes.
While a close friend of scholarship, Hahn recognized the loss of vitality of youth in our so information-bound era and called for “a sterner exercise of the thinking faculty.”
“It is a sin of the soul to coerce the young into opinions” he said,” nonetheless I consider it culpable neglect not to impel every youth into life-giving experiences.”  
             
 © Atlantic Challenge 2003
gig sailing in Challenge race
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