All posts by Anne Peacey

Appeal from Seeking Sanctuary: volunteers urgently needed in Calais

Phil visited Calais on 30 May, taking clothing, cash and bedding donated by various groups and individuals. He found a situation that was superficially calm, yet worrying: worries that have since been confirmed as correct

More volunteers with jobs in education can turn up during school holidays and various busy groups of volunteers are now using corners of the warehouse run by “Help Refugees” on behalf of l’Auberge des Migrants, so bringing back an air of bustle and energy rarely seen since the autumn demolition of the “Jungle”. In reality more volunteers and donations are needed as the local migrant population increases and official harassment becomes more evident.

The Refugee Community Kitchen was running at high capacity serving 1300 people a day at 4 different distributions points, made up of lunch and dinner in Calais for 550 souls; dinner in Dunkirk for 200 souls; plus 600 lunch and night-time food boxes for new arrivals and the most vulnerable, not to mention making flapjacks for partners who care for the souls in Paris, and providing 1000 litres of clean water per service in Calais. Volunteers chop, stir, wash, pack, drive, serve and then come back and do it all over again many times a day, 7 days a week with never ending enthusiasm and smiles.

The kitchen needs help more than ever: please pass on the news that people can get a volunteer pack about how to come to the kitchen, where to stay in Calais, and much more, by sending an email to refugeecommunitykitchen@gmail.com – or money can be donated on-line via the linkhttps://mydonate.bt.com/donation/start.html?charity=147727.

CALAIS – THE DEVELOPING SITUATION

Travelling around the town, small groups of young migrants can be seen, with increased visibility due to the fresh increase in numbers since the start of the year. The same is true for the imported national police from the Compagnie Républicaine de Securité in full riot gear with helmets, shields, batons and automatic weapons, usually sporting sunglasses and moving with a pronounced swagger.

The former “jungle” has been razed to the ground – a wilderness waiting for the return of the particular flora and fauna that can survive on the exposed surfaces of the decaying sand dunes. Human beings have been returning for months, joined by new arrivals, but this territory is forbidden to them. Some are sheltered by local families, but with a ban on building shelters or erecting tents, hundreds sleep rough in patches of woodland in the adjoining industrial estate and in a few other locations close to lorry parks and motorway slip roads. Aid workers agree that there are around 1000 in and around the town and almost as many more scattered along the coast and in villages and countryside near main roads and motorways.

Newcomers – with a significant proportion of youngsters – arrive exhausted, unwashed, dressed in tatters, malnourished and frequently suffering from various maladies, particularly scabies and chronic fungal foot infestations. Despite the lack of sustained UK media coverage, the need for humanitarian aid has risen, especially as the Calais warehouses now additionally supply many distant locations. Volunteers do not have to be young enough and fit enough to sign up to work for long hours without a break for many days on end, as some volunteers have found at new projects in Greece. What is important is that they can promise to attend regularly and fit in to a regular routine. Sleeping bags and blankets are confiscated by police and sprayed with pepper to render them useless, bringing warehouse stocks down to zero.

But the apparently peaceful afternoon scene appeared fragile, as has since been confirmed.

The day after Phil’s visit CRS police told volunteers that the distribution of clothes, food and water was forbidden, save between limited hours and to limited numbers of recipients. No written Instruction was produced, but large numbers of police have turned up to block every distribution. The experienced volunteers who go out to distribute aid are being physically and verbally attacked and treated like criminals. Associations have prepared these volunteers to be ready to perhaps end up in police custody just for handing out food and water to those in need. Some officials have said that all activities that generate crowds of people are forbidden under the long-standing state of emergency, especially as they may hinder traffic flow – and this typically down broad and quiet cul de sacs adequately designed to allow access for heavy vehicles to light industrial and commercial premises .

CHILDREN IN PERIL

On top of such recent (almost) local experiences, our concern for lone migrant children continues. And these can be found in very many places – a thousand in France alone. We suggest that you and others may light a candle to remember a child victim seeking sanctuary. More than that, anyone with young relatives who may be fleeing countries producing migrants needs to know about the work of “Safe Passage” – www.safepassage.org.uk.

This organisation, set up by Citizens-UK, works to help children and vulnerable adults who are alone and searching for asylum get access to safe legal routes to the UK. They have already reunited hundreds with their families in the UK and are working hard to help the many more who have reached Europe and still seek asylum either to join relatives or through their vulnerable condition. They are currently assembling lists of individuals with a right to be helped and asking courts of law to insist that our government lives up to its obligations to help them. Details of relevant cases should be passed on to George Gabriel, who leads this project. His office phone number is 020 7112 4984, or he can be emailed at george.gabriel@safepassage.org.uk and he can also supply information to be distributed to locations where it may be seen by relatives who may benefit from it.

In the wake of the Manchester and London terrorist attacks when so many young lives were lost in a heartless atrocity, it is not surprising that the nation’s mood is sombre. It is of some consolation that the solidarity from so many people and organisations across the UK and beyond has been so clearly manifested.

At Seeking Sanctuary our thoughts also turn to all those those child victims who have lost their lives during journeys at sea, and by road, air and rail, in a desperate struggle to find sanctuary.  The UN estimates that at least 500 children lost their lives at sea last year and there were further victims in recent weeks when grossly overloaded small boats capsized. 

Who will be there to mourn and grieve for these children? Who will hold  a prayer vigil for them? Their parents may well have lost their lives or lost contact with their children having committed their life savings to people smugglers in vain attempts to get their children to safety. Or the members of their extended family journeying with them may have lost their lives as well. And their plight does not make the headlines – pitiful pictures of them struggling in the sea are no longer thought to be newsworthy….

And so, we ask our supporters to remember and mourn for them – by lighting candles or perhaps remembering them in intentions and by highlighting their plight to help to bring an end to this modern day scandal. And here at ‘Seeking Sanctuary’ we will be expanding our area of concern, not forgetting the plight of the abandoned migrants in and around Calais, but also trying where possible to highlight the wider picture in a world in which it is increasingly difficult to seek and find sanctuary.

This is reflected in our updated “sign-off” paragraph below and in our intention to produce some relevant prayer cards to make a wider group of people aware of the dire conditions in which so many migrants survive. We need to get an idea of how many cards to produce, so please do let us know if you may like to acquire a quantity to pass on to others.

Phil + Ben.

‘Seeking Sanctuary’ aims to raise awareness about people displaced from their homes and to channel basic humanitarian assistance from Faith Communities and Community Organisations via partnerships with experienced aid workers. Our special concern is for those who arrive in north-western France, mistakenly expecting a welcome in the UK. Almost all the 8,000+ migrants in Calais in October 2016 were moved away, hopefully to better accommodation. 1616 unaccompanied minors also leftalong with hundreds of vulnerable women and children, hoping  that claims to stay in the UK or France would be processed. Many judge that they have been let down, and hundreds have returned to sleep rough near Calais and along the coast. The Grande-Synthe camp near Dunkirk burnt down in April 2017, displacing around 1400 people, over 950 of them moved elsewhere, whilst the rest remain nearby, joined by scores of newcomers weekly. 

They need food, good counsel and clothes, which are accepted, sorted and distributed by several Calais warehouses, which also supply needs further afield.

Further information from Ben Bano on 07887 651117 or Phil Kerton on 01474 873802.

See latest news from Seeking sanctuary

 

 

NJPN Newsletter Summer 2017

The lead article in the latest edition of NJPN  Newsletter is a reflection on  the message of Laudato Si’ from  the perspective of a chaplain for the Apostleship of the Sea, based in the largest UK cargo port of Immingham.

We also hear from a retired Methodist Minister of efforts to work ecumenically as well as a commitment to developing interfaith links. He feels that they are some way short of fulfilling the bible challenge to be One. But Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, Methodist, Baptist, URC and Pentecostal and Evangelical are all making common cause.

Included in this edition is the speaking personally column with Julian Filochowski as well as a diary of future events.

The newsletter is available to download.

Summer 2017

Speaking Personally: Julian Filochowski

 In the soon to be published Summer edition of the NJPN newsletter, Julian Filochowski reflects on his commitment to and passion for working for justice and peace.

Where do you think your commitment to justice and peace comes from?

Being part of the ‘Sodality of Our Lady’ (a precursor of Christian Life Communities) at my Jesuit grammar school in Leeds, I was introduced to See-Judge-Act. There I discovered social action as integral to Catholic faith and I became ‘an activist’ – a badge I still wear proudly. At University in the 60s, ‘God is Love’ and the text of 1 John 4: 20 became engraved on my soul. Paul VI’s Populorum Progressio, characterised by the Wall Street Journal as ‘souped-up Marxism’, had a significant impact on me.  And somehow an emerging awareness of the so-called underdeveloped world led me to voluntary service in Guatemala with CIIR. This changed me profoundly.

Seeing the desperate poverty and malnutrition in the indigenous Mayan communities and witnessing the gross injustice in their miserable conditions on the coffee estates and sugar plantations hit me in the guts. It not only evoked compassion but I began to understand that aid projects and volunteering were simply not enough. Genuine love, to be meaningful, had to be effective. Effective love in the context of the Third World required the pursuit of justice together with the empowerment of the poor communities themselves to secure their human dignity and fundamental rights. I had inadvertently stumbled upon social analysis. I embraced Paulo Freire’s conscientisation methodology as a critical key to change, and the newly-emerging liberation theology as an intellectual anchor.

In 1973, I joined CIIR’s London team working on development education and human rights. I dallied with – and rejected – far left politics. I stood for Parliament in 1979 as a Labour candidate and lost my deposit. In CIIR, and subsequently in CAFOD, I encountered literally dozens of inspiring figures from every corner of the world, working for God’s kingdom – tackling poverty and struggling for justice. My own commitment matured. But the process of discernment is never done!

What for you are the most important areas of concern today?

 Leaving aside the failed neoliberal economic model that drives globalisation, the accelerating inequality in Britain, and the colossal challenges surrounding migration and refugees, I look at my own direct involvements.

  • I work with others through the Romero Trust to try to embed into our Church life and ecclesial culture ‘a faith that does justice’ in the style of Pope Francis. This is principally through seeking the recognition of Oscar Romero as a saint of the universal Church, a model Christian and an ecumenical icon who embodied in his ministry and martyrdom an option for the poor, a commitment to non-violence and a profound spirituality.
  • I collaborate with the Guyana Region of the Jesuits in the promotion of Pan Amazon ecclesial responses to the destruction of the environment, the impoverishment of the indigenous peoples and the violations of their rights by mining companies, mega development schemes and even public authorities.
  • I am part of an informal interagency grouping looking at how the justice, peace and social service charisms can helpfully be fostered amongst the next generations and what resources or initiatives might assist them to flourish.

What sustains you in your commitment?

 My faith in God – that is God’s solemn promise that the evil b**tards of this world will NOT have the last word. One of my two personal mottos is ‘Non illegitimis carborundum’.

  1. The witness and the indomitable spirit of Oscar Romero; and the integrity, courage and dedication of other contemporary iconic figures like Maria Julia Hernandez, Helder Camara, Maura O’Donohue, Denis Hurley, and Mildred Nevile. They give me strength and hope – and in the darker moments they revive my drooping spirits!
  2. Crucially, my companions on this faith and justice journey; we support, energise and occasionally carry one another.

What are your hopes for a Church like ours for the 21st century?

  • “In the beginning was the Word….” For me it’s the word ‘compassion’. Pope Francis continually highlights the word ‘mercy’ as the hallmark of the true Church.  My prayer is that the whole Church will be seen to embrace that word of compassion and mercy and live it.  Right teaching (orthodoxy) without right action (orthopraxis) is empty and void – as Pope Benedict once remarked.
  • My second motto is ‘Honourably Catholic – Honourably Gay’. There has been a gradual positive shift in the Church’s attitude to lesbian, gay and trans people. But there is still a long way to go. The medical and scientific world has virtually unanimously accepted that homosexuality is a naturally-occurring, non-pathological minority variant on the human condition appearing regularly in the population. Once it is accepted that it is not a voluntarily chosen perversion and gay people are not simply defective heterosexuals to be “cured”, then the Natural Law leads to different conclusions from the presuppositions that form the basis of the Church’s current official teaching. But changed teaching will be the last stage – just as in the case of the divorced and remarried.

However, changed understandings, changed attitudes, changed language, changed pastoral practice are beginning to happen – and should be happening everywhere. LGBT people still suffer violence, open discrimination, bullying in schools and elsewhere, and high suicide rates – not to mention imprisonment and even capital punishment in a handful of countries – not just Chechnya.  So, there is a real justice issue here – and sadly, too often, it is the elephant in the room at progressive Christian gatherings.

  • An end to the hateful diatribes from Taliban Catholics in the blogosphere would be a welcome blessing. We yearn for unity in the Church but not uniformity: we are many flames – but one single fire. Together we constitute that ‘travelling wandering race’, the rambling shambling pilgrim People of God. Laus Deo Semper.

    

WCC and European churches decry Manchester bombing

 

May 23, 2017

The Conference of European Churches (CEC) and the general secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, have strongly condemned a bombing in Manchester, United Kingdom, that has left 22 persons dead and another five-dozen wounded. The attack took place at Manchester Stadium, just as thousands of children and young people, along with their parents and many others, were leaving a pop concert.

“It is particularly shocking that this so-called suicide killing was directed against young people, and even children,” Tveit said in a comment.

The attack, reportedly by a suicide bomber, follows a string of such attacks in continental Europe—in Brussels, Berlin, Paris, Stockholm, St. Petersburg, Istanbul, and Nice— and the UK, which in 2005 suffered subway and bus bombings in London and a more recent attack at the Palace of Westminster. The motives of the attack are unknown and no individual or group has claimed responsibility.

Together, the World Council of Churches and the Conference of European Churches decry this cruel act that irreparably touched the lives of so many. Whatever the reasons for these actions, there is no justification for such violence, the world should be united in condemning this criminal act of horror, they stated. CEC general secretary Fr Heikki Huttunen joined Tveit in these sentiments. “We honour a God who is life-giving, who sustains and redeems. Such horrors as happened last night encourage us to affirm this truth even more strongly.”

The CEC and the WCC encourage prayer for and solidarity with the victims and those close to them.

More information here

 

Thoughts and prayers with the people of Manchester

 

NJPN would like to express shock  at the horrific event in Manchester last night.  Our thoughts and prayers are with those who were involved and with the families who have lost precious members.

There are no circumstances where such action could be justified or condoned.

Young people and children should be able to celebrate and enjoy such events safely and parents should feel secure in allowing their children to grow to independence free from fear.

  We owe it to all our young people to work with increased urgency for a more peaceful and equitable future for all.

 

*** NJPN Action of the Week *** Free humanitarian workers from criminal charges

 Manuel Blanco, Enrique Rodríguez and Julio Latorre are Spanish firemen. Last December, they moved to the Greek island of Lesbos to become volunteers for NGO PROEMAID (Professional Emergency Aid) and put their professional lifesaving experience to a noble cause: saving children, women, and men, escaping war and poverty from drowning
The court case is pending. They could face a sentence of 10 years of imprisonment. 

These men risked their lives to help thousands of people, but their lifesaving actions were seen by the Greek government as human smuggling.
 
The legislation which allowed Julio, Manuel and Enrique to be arrested for human smuggling is being revised by the European Commission right now. Sign now to demand humanitarian workers are free from criminal charges for the work they do. 

More information here