Quaker, 90, begins decade-long walking challenge

Tony FisherBedfordshire, Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire
News imageKady Braine/BBC An older man with grey hair and dark glasses facing the camera as he stands in a garden with a lawn, bushes, trees and flower beds in the background. He is wearing a white shirt and a yellow top which has a footprint on it with the words "a nineties Odyssey" written in the middle.Kady Braine/BBC
Gerald Drewett has described his challenge as "a 90s Odyssey"

A lifelong Quaker has started to walk 4,000 steps a day for the 90 days following his 90th birthday, with plans to repeat the feat every year until he turns 100.

Gerald Drewett, from Hertford, is raising money to help maintain The Peace Museum in Saltaire, Bradford, which he founded in 1998.

The charity charts the history of peace movements and peacemakers and was born out of the Give Peace A Chance Trust which he ran for 40 years.

He described his challenge as "a 90s Odyssey" to bring "peace and social harmony to the forefront of the minds of people".

News imageGoogle A large, multi-storey historical stone building with rows of tall windows, decorative arches, and small tower-like structures along the roofline. In front of the building, several cars are parked on a wet, paved area that appears to be a car park or loading space. The sky is overcast, and the overall scene has a quiet, subdued atmosphere with no visible people.Google
The Peace Museum is located on the 3rd Floor of Salts Mill in Bradford

Drewett, who had a heart attack in 2004, said he was "slightly daunted to take on this challenge".

He added he would do it "without fail for the next 90 days and pick it up for the next nine years if God keeps me alive".

News imageGerald Drewett An older man with grey hair and dark glasses facing the camera as he walks in woodland. He is wearing a white shirt and a yellow top which has a footprint design on it with the words "a nineties Odyssey" written in the middle.Gerald Drewett
Drewett said he was "very lucky here on Hertford Heath with some lovely walks"

He is steadfast in protecting the Peace Museum, which says it is the only institution dedicated to the history of non-violence and social harmony.

Although he is no longer actively involved in running it, the money raised will go directly to further developing its education programmes within schools and local communities.

He said: "I am asking people to walk with me in the sense of providing funds to support the Peace Museum so it can become a national institution and not fade away."

To make sure he carries out the correct amount of steps he said he had "got a little step counter which took me most of the day to set up".

His "odyssey" began on his 90th birthday on 19 May.

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