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The bicycles that can change lives

Jem Stein's bicycle repair project enhances the lives of refugees

May 20, 2021 12:52
jem

ByGaby Wine, GaWine

4 min read

It’s not often that you hear about a project which was set up in someone’s back garden and goes on to profoundly impact the lives of thousands of people. But the Bike Project is one of those rarities, which began when its founder Jem Stein started tinkering with second-hand bikes. Once he had repaired them, he would take them to a refugee drop-in centre in East Finchley. “If someone had told me then that I would still be doing this today, I think I would have laughed.”

But “doing this” he very much is. Since Stein set up The Bike Project in 2013, his charity has donated over 8,000 bikes to refugees and asylum seekers who have fled war, terror and famine to start a new life in the UK.

The 33-year-old first saw how valuable bikes could be for refugees when he was a student in London in 2009 and joined a befriending scheme for unaccompanied asylum seekers run by the JCC. “I was paired with someone called Adam. He had come to the UK from Darfur, aged 16, with just the clothes on his back. One of the biggest challenges for him was getting around because of the cost of public transport. Asylum seekers now get around £37 a week. A bus pass costs half of that, but they aren’t allowed to work.”

A friend of his had an old bike and Stein, a keen cyclist himself, asked if he could give it to Adam. “It allowed him to access essential services such as education, healthcare and psychological support. Without having to pay for transport, he could afford to get to there.”