Christian Climate Action-Working within Extinction Rebellion this last two weeks.
I want first to put something right with colleagues in Extinction Rebellion. An in-joke developed in our Christian Climate Action affinity group about ‘’getting Phil Kingston into prison’’ and when it went public some of you voiced disturbance because in countries across the world, going to prison means torture and possible death. I apologise for my insensitivity. To honour them, I point to Berta Caceres, the brilliant and fearless Honduran environmental activist who was awarded the prestigious Goldman Prize. This is her acceptance speech: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AR1kwx8b0ms
She was assassinated 11 months later by government and corporate hirelings.
My campaigning has gone to new levels in this context where many groups work together with common purpose. I am relieved that at last the utter seriousness and urgency of the developing earth catastrophe is being pushed into public consciousness after decades of avoidance by almost all politicians, mainstream media and of course economic and financial powers. Our political ‘representatives’ have let us down. With notable exceptions, they lost their credibility by not speaking about this.
To say a little about the last 12 days: not in my wildest dreams did I imagine that I, a former probation officer and educator of probation officers and Local Authority social workers – all of whom work in a context of respect for the law – would within a week be arrested on three occasions and spend considerable time in police cells. Being given the opportunity to meet so many police as human beings has been a gift. Yes, I know that when the chips are down, they have agreed to uphold laws which I regard as fundamentally unjust, such as those which are heavily on the side of corporate and state power. Within that context I want to emphasize their kindness and respect to me and my colleagues. Whenever I had an opportunity to speak about my concern for my grandchildren, I asked if they had children. I was grateful that so many were willing to speak about their concerns regarding climate breakdown. One of reasonably high rank immediately responded with his concern that there are now only 12 years within which to halt his children’s descent into disaster.
These connections with those who we may often regard as ‘other’ are, I am sure, made more possible by our absolute commitment to nonviolence, including verbal nonviolence, to all persons. Hard as it often is to hold on to my belief that politicians and those in business and finance have a humanity exactly like mine, I am determined to do so. I have no illusions about the wrongness of their ideologies and behaviour but I completely refuse to say that they aren’t human. If someone like me can change over the years by facing the traumas of life, especially childhood ones and seeking help for them, I hold hope for all.
I would like to address the rest of this note to other followers of Jesus, though the link in the final paragraph may be surprisingly congruent because it touches our common humanity.
I regard myself as a fortunate man to be alive at the same time as Pope Francis. His arrival has given immense encouragement to those of us in the churches, especially the Catholic Church, who have a vocation to justice, peace and care of the Earth. Prior to this, the experience of many of us was that this vocation was suppressed more than encouraged. It is essential at this critical time of global suffering that this vocation be fully honoured and supported. His writings and speeches about the relationship between the current global economy on the one hand and on the other the destruction of the Earth and the exclusion of the majority of the world’s population from what should be the Common Good of everyone, have a clarity and reality which has often not been as forthright in many previous papal documents. See for example his ‘Joy of the Gospel’ (Evangelii Gaudium) especially paras 52 – 75 beginning with ‘No to an Economy of Exclusion and many parts of Praise be, Our Common Home (Laudato ‘Si).
http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/apost_exhortations/documents/papa-francesco_esortazione-ap_20131124_evangelii-gaudium.html
My experience is that there is often a focus upon the latter document by agencies like CAFOD and Caritas and minimal references to the economic one in Joy of the Gospel. Criticising the current economy seems to be avoided as much within the Church as in society generally. I often regard Pope Francis as a rather lonely man in the Churches of the materially rich countries where his pastoral care and simple living are acclaimed but his economic critique is made invisible by silence. He calls us to extend our focus upon personal sin to fully include structural sin.
An aspect of Pope Francis which I value hugely is his explicit seeking of the guidance of the Holy Spirit and his request to all of us to do the same. Our Church so often seems dead to me in comparison with the one in the Acts of the Apostles.
I end by asking if you will read the speech by Pope Francis to the World Gathering of Popular Movements gathered at Santa Cruz in Bolivia in October 2014. I imagine that it will shock many Christians whilst being an affirmation for others. This is the link
http://movimientospopulares.org/wpcontent/uploads/2016/10/Documents_ingles_web.pdf .
Phil Kingston, Dad and Grandad
Latest News from the North West
The December NW NJPN E Bulletin leads with a hard-hitting Remembrance Day homily by a Leicestershire priest, plus a reflection, also making links to the Arms Trade, from Christine Allen of Christian Aid, the newly appointed Director for CAFOD. Several pages are devoted to highlights from the UN Special Rapporteur’s damning analysis of poverty in the UK. Climate change also features extensively as well as book reviews and a comprehensive diary going right through till March 2019.
NW NJPN Justice and Peace E Bulletin December 2018
Do please pass on to others.
Wishing all our readers the joys of the Christmas season and a peaceful New Year.
Anne O’Connor
Advent Reflections from NJPN
Prayers and action ideas based on the Scripture readings for each of the 4 weeks of Advent have been prepared for NJPN by Anne O’Connor.
Please feel free to copy and pass round as you wish.
ADVENT REFLECTION 2018 Week 1 Be prepared
ADVENT REFLECTION 2018 Week 2 Building the Kingdom
ADVENT REFLECTION 2018 Week 3 Joyful Expectation
ADVENT REFLECTION 2018 Week 4 The Lords promise will be fulfilled
Church Urban Fund: The Advent Sleep Out Challenge
Since the Advent Sleepout Challenge began in 2014 the Challenge has raised a phenomenal £250,000, which has transformed thousands of lives around the country through the work of the Church Urban Fund. This is all thanks to people participating in Sleepouts and spending the night in churches, community halls, garden sheds and other weird and wonderful places! You can accept the challenge as a team or as an individual – in whatever way works for you.
The issue of homelessness is more topical than ever, with shocking figures released last month evidencing that over 440 homeless people have died in the last twelve months. What better way to do something about this than by supporting the Church Urban Fund through the Advent Sleepout Challenge, which mobilises churches around the country to offer life-saving services to people experiencing homelessness. For every £20 raised we can offer a bed in a winter night shelter.
Look on the Church Urban Fund website for Advent resources and reflections coming this week!
Church action on Poverty: Reading scripture from the margins
The Bible shows us again and again that God is on the side of the poor and the oppressed – people on the margins. But too often, when we read scripture in our churches, we focus on other aspects of the story, or we are so familiar with the text that we don’t notice the challenging things it has to say to us. Jesus’ parables are one of the best examples of this problem. When we read and think about the parables, we almost always look for allegorical, spiritual meanings.
But the parables are actually very earthly stories – and if we try to put ourselves in the place of their original audience, we discover very different messages in them.
Today Church Action on Poverty launches a series of five Bible studies which will challenge you to get alongside the people who are on the margins of our own society – and to speak out for justice. They will show you how the parables are subversive, dangerous stories.
Click here now to download Dangerous Stories,
The latest newsletter from Joint Public Issues Team
JPIT has been busy preparing a new resource for Advent and would love you to take a look. ‘Prepare Ye the Way’ is designed to help highlight some of the issues faced by society today while reflecting on the birth of Jesus.
It is always exciting to hear the impact which the work of JPIT has been having: thank you for your phone calls, tweets, Facebook comments and e-mails which in turn help us support you and our Churches in creative and meaningful ways. In particular, we would love to hear from you if you have managed to ‘Meet Your MP’.
This month’s newsletter also contains our latest news on Universal Credit, new poetry, Season 2 of our podcast and more.
You can find out more here
Seeking Sanctuary’s Update for November.
‘One can face life without yielding to despondency or madness, since the anguish of the world is embraced by an infinite benevolence investing it with purpose.’ Eric Varden, 2018.
JUMPING TO CONCLUSIONS
Ben writes: As I was glancing at the BBC news a few days ago, an item caught my attention – a report that in an Ipswich school a 30 year old man was attending classes. The report was full of warnings from parents, threatening to withdraw their children from classes while the man was present in the classroom. It transpired that the person concerned is an asylum seeker whose age is the subject of some contention. What saddened me was the rapid assumption he could be a risk to his classmates – I felt that we are gradually, if not unconsciously, absorbing the narrative which associates asylum seekers – and foreigners – with risk and danger. Are we absorbing the Trumpian anti migrant narrative more than the might believe? Hence the need for our advocacy work and that of so many other organisations as we seek to combat their dangerous narrative.
SOLIDARITY
It has been a source of comfort to know that we are not alone. A few weeks ago we were pleased to be with 90 people who joined us in Dover for the ‘Solidarity across the Channel’ event, which we helped to organise. It was great for activists and supporters to link up with each other, share their experiences, and learn about the various ways on both sides of the Channel in which the ‘hostile environment’ common to both Britain and France operates.
MEMORIAL
Afterwards we held a short prayer vigil at the newly installed memorial for the over 200 people who have lost their lives attempting to reach the UK from the other side of the Channel during the past 20 years. The memorial is situated on the promenade of Dover seafront, fittingly within line of sight of the French coast. (And thanks to all of our generous supporters who have enabled us to pay for the memorial in full). The official inauguration takes place at 3pm on 15th December, to be led by the Bishop of Dover. Please do join us if you are in or near Dover. Let us remember at this point the 64 people who have just lost their lives off the coast of Libya, when their rubber dinghy was punctured.
FORGOTTEN CHILDREN
Our advocacy for the forgotten child exiles continues. We have just learnt the news that only 20 unaccompanied child refugees have been allowed into the UK under a scheme that was meant to settle 3000 vulnerable children from the conflict zones of the Middle East and North Africa. And in spite of the publicity given to the Dubbs amendment, we now know that only 220 children have been transferred to the UK under this scheme in spite of the grudging ‘official’ target of 480 children. This month marks the 80th anniversary of the first kindertransport, when Neville Chamberlain agreed to accept up to 10,000 children. What a contrast between then and now, particularly in view of Britain’s stated aims to put an end to modern slavery and trafficking, to which unaccompanied children are particularly vulnerable.
Recent figures from the Child Trafficking Advice Centre (CTAC), which identifies and tries to locate children who have crossed the Channel alone, show that since August 2016, 293 youngsters are known to have arrived via unauthorised routes, of whom, just 103 have been located – suggesting many are living underground. Our friends in Social Workers Without Borders, who jointly carried out a series of child assessments in the Calais ‘Jungle’ prior to its demolition, said that of the 42 children they then assessed as being “in need” – none of whom were granted safe passage – just 9 are now known to have made it to the UK alone, while 14 are ‘untraceable’.
The Dubs scheme was supposed to result in the UK transfer of vulnerable refugees who were languishing in the ‘Jungle ‘, desperately needed assistance. This clearly was not done. People who get over alone may be told that they owe maybe £1,000-£2,000 to traffickers. Sometimes they’re given a year to sort their paperwork, and then they’re told they’ve got to start paying it back: that is when the exploitation begins. But no one is willing to speak, because they can’t guarantee the safety of their families back home in Sudan or Afghanistan, if they do name the exploiters.
Phil writes:
THE DOVER EVENT
As Ben has remarked, around 90 people (a third of them from the Pas-de-Calais) attended the ‘Solidarity Across the Channel’ gathering in St Paul’s Church, Dover on 20 October. We shared news and views about the situation of thousands of migrants surviving near the French coast, largely forgotten by the media and subject to an extremely hostile environment. The Justice and Peace Commissions of the Westminster and Southwark Archdioceses had organised the gathering in collaboration with us and with and the Catholic Worker house of hospitality in Calais. Everyone greatly appreciated the welcome – and hot lunch – provided by parish priest, Fr Jeff Cridland, and his community.
Conversations – translated into French or English, as appropriate – were enlivened and provoked by a short interactive play “Stage 3”, presented on behalf of the “Safe Passage” campaign to seek pledges to accept another 10,000 children over 10 years, marking this year’s 80th anniversary of ‘Kindertransport’.
SHOCKING FACTS FROM FRANCE
UK participants were shocked to learn about the state-sponsored hostility that is part of everyday life for exiles stuck in our neighbouring countries. There was good news from those who work to alleviate some of the hardship and to provide a little dignity to those in dire need:
-
The Community Kitchen and Salam provide around 2000 meals daily;
-
warehouses set up by the Auberge des Migrants and Care4Calais provide clothes, bedding and toiletries;
-
other groups provide more specific services such as First Aid, legal advice and language classes;
-
Secours Catholique and the Catholic Worker House strive to establish an atmosphere which values people as individuals, made in God’s image and likeness, each called to fulfil their potential.
All these and other support groups constantly need fresh volunteers and donations of supplies.
AND FROM THE UK
Our French visitors were appalled hear the complexity and delays in the UK asylum process, where almost half the appeals against an initial refusal of any right to remain get overturned upon appeal. Also, the continued use of indefinite detention for people who have committed no crime and and have not appeared in court. This deprives people of liberty for administrative convenience, and is costly, ineffective and harmful to mental health and well-being.
Listlessness soon develops under the Limbo of indefinite detention. One week stretches into a month or three, and a sense of hopelessness is etched on every face and strains every conversation. It is particularly galling that over half the detainees are eventually released into the community, confirming their incarceration was pointless.
LATEST NEWS FROM DUNKIRK
UK residents were further shocked to find out about the 1800 people (mainly Kurds) sleeping rough in woods near Dunkirk, including many women and children, whilst another 800 remain in and around Calais. Police regularly confiscate and destroy tents, bedding and other belongings, having been ordered to stop the coast becoming a “pole of attraction” – the equivalent of the “Culture of Hostility” practised by the UK Home Office.
THE FUTURE
All organisers are hard at work for the moment, producing a bilingual report on our time together, but will keep in touch across the sea and discern what actions we can take together, both in advocacy for these voiceless people and in raising awareness of injustices, eventually meeting together once more.
And if you are buying Christmas presents, you might consider the 2019 Wall Calendar produced by the Refugee Community Kitchen, which is full of nourishing recipes, downsized for use at home.suggested donation of £15 per Calendar, made here, will cover production costs and still make a meaningful £9 contribution to the Kitchen – enough to pay for 18 decent hot meals.
As ever, our thanks for your support and your concern,
Ben + Phil.
‘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 the 1000 or so exiles who are stuck north-western France, mistakenly expecting a welcome in the UK.
They need food, water, good counsel and clothes, which are accepted, sorted and distributed by several organisations, including two Calais warehouses which also supply needs further afield.
If you have not already confirmed your agreement to receive our monthly email updates after 25 May 2018 (and occasional urgent action news), please use this link to do so via our web page – you can unsubscribe at any time by sending us an email.
2nd World Day of The Poor – Less than 2 weeks to go
A message from Pope Francis
“This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him”
The words of the Psalmist become our own whenever we are called to encounter the different conditions of suffering and marginalization experienced by so many of our brothers and sisters whom we are accustomed to label generically as “the poor”. The Psalmist is not alien to suffering; quite the contrary. He has a direct experience of poverty and yet transforms it into a song of praise and thanksgiving to the Lord. Psalm 34 allows us today, surrounded as we are by many different forms of poverty, to know those who are
truly poor. It enables us to open our eyes to them, to hear their cry and to recognize their needs.
Read the message here
For resources to use in Dioceses and Parishes:
Click here
JRF: Universal Credit is failing workers who are locked in poverty
New analysis from Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
Sky News people and politics reporter Nick Martin has conducted an in-depth investigation into Universal Credit, speaking to former employees and people with experience of the system. The investigation contains new analysis from JRF showing how more workers are being locked in poverty, and highlighting our call ahead of the Chancellor’s Budget on Monday for the social security system to be redesigned so it loosens poverty’s constraints, enabling more people to build a better life.
Watch the video here
Synod of bishops: listening to young people
The bishops, who were called to Rome for this month long meeting to discuss the church’s outreach to the young, have been urged by Pope Francis to listen to one another and especially to young people. The meeting, which began Oct. 3 and concludes Oct. 28, is made up of 267 prelates and the 72 auditors, of whom about 30 are young people.
Read the report here