Scouts et Guides Pluralistes de Belgique

Les Scouts et Guides Pluralistes de Belgique is a coeducational, nonreligious Scouting movement in French-speaking Belgium. This movement, known until 1992 as Fédération des Éclaireuses et Éclaireurs is the francophone branch after the split of the Boy-Scouts et Girl-Guides de Belgique (BSB-GGB) in 1966. Pluralist Scouts are officially recognized by the French Community in Wallonia-Brussels and are active members of the Council of the Conseil de la Jeunesse d’Expression française and the Confédération des Organisations de Jeunesse indépendantes et pluralistes (COJ).

Scouts et Guides Pluralistes de Belgique
LocationAvenue de la Porte de Hal, 39 - 1060 Bruxelles
CountryBelgium
FoundedDecember 23, 1910; 113 years ago (1910-12-23)
Membership4500
PrésidentFrançois Jacquemin
Website
http://www.scoutspluralistes.be
 Scouting portal

Branches edit

From 5 to 21 years old, young people are divided into different branches:

  • Castors (Beavers), from 5 to 8 years old
  • Louveteaux (Cubs), 8 to 12 years old
  • Guides et scouts (Guides and Scouts), 12 to 15 years old
  • Pionniers (Pioneers), 15 to 18 years old
  • Clan, from 18 to 21 years old

Uniform edit

The uniform of the pluralist Scouts is composed of a scarf with the colors of its unit and a gray shirt. Girls and boys wear the same uniform. For the bottom in general there is no set rule, but some troops insist on wearing shorts.

edit

The logo of the Scouts et Guides Pluralistes de Belgique is explained as:[1]

  • a youth, action movement
    • The girl and boy are moving
    • The blocks are oblique, not symmetrical and placed in an open framework sketched in pencil.
  • boys and girls together
    • The characters form adapted
    • It is outside their scope, one to the other
  • Scouting
  • specificity Pluralistic
    • The word "pluralism"! (This specificity is underscored by the assertive green label below)
    • The four different colours

References edit

  1. ^ "explication logo" (PDF). Scouts et Guides Pluralistes de Belgique. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 2 September 2010.