The Enigma Lunches
“As well as the 456,976 possible starting positions for any set of four wheels, this Enigma machine offers further variations in settings which means that there are 4,134 million possible ways in which it could be set up.” Alan Turing Institute, The British Library
Throughout 2018, in honour of Hammersmith United Charities’ 400th anniversary, we are celebrating the rich diversity of the local area through a curated monthly lunch series called “The Enigma Lunches.”
Inspired by a cross-communal lunch we hosted last year as part of our PhD student, Carolyn Defrin’s research, and Alan Turing’s WWII Enigma Code-cracking (that transpired as a result of a casual chance encounter with a secretary); we are excited to see what might emerge when different people come together around food, art and casual conversation.

Each month’s lunch will be hosted by different cultural community centres throughout the borough, and showcase associated food and arts activities. Additionally, each lunch will coincide with the republication of a memoir originally published during the 80s and 90s from the Hammersmith and Fulham Ethnic Communities Oral History Project.



One in three people will develop dementia, and yet it remains a much-misunderstood condition. People don’t like to talk about it, assume it’s something only older people get, and think it will be obvious if you meet someone who’s living with it.

Sue says, “I want the students to have a sense of wonder at how incredible nature is when they’re planting and seeing things grow. We’re growing lots of different varieties, including around 15 types of tomatoes. In a supermarket, you have a very limited array, because the produce is grown to last a long time on the shelf. In the garden, we’re growing for colour and variety and taste, which is much more exciting.”