Prayers of Intercession for Refugee Week

These prayers were said today outside the Home Office on Marsham Street, London.

  1. We pray for the thousands of men, women and children, known and unknown, who set out to seek safety and a better life in Europe, but who were drowned in the Mediterranean, the Aegean Sea or the English Channel, or whose lives were cut short when they met with hostility or violence.   O Lord hear our prayerResponse        And let our cry come unto you
  2. We pray  today for all those fleeing the brutal war on Ukrainian cities.  May they speedily find  places of safety and security in our country and in our hearts.   O Lord hear our prayer, Response        And let our cry come unto you
  3. We pray for all those seeking sanctuary in the UK who depend on the UK adhering to the European Convention for Human Rights, and pray that our government will respect the agreement that we helped to draw up over 70 years ago.  O Lord hear our prayer   Response        And let our cry come unto you.  
  4. We pray for the former residents of the camp in Calais and for those who remain there. We pray for protection of all people in refugee camps and the communities they build.   O Lord hear our prayer  Response        And let our cry come unto you
  5. We pray for the refugees arriving in the UK and ending up in the former military barracks and camps, or those placed in detention at arrival. We pray for their mental and physical wellbeing and for their right to decent housing. O Lord hear our prayer    Response  
  6. For the comfort of all who have lost loved ones in the course of fleeing from their home country, or who have had to experience the trauma of watching others die.  O Lord hear our prayer   Response     
  7. For a resolution to the conflicts which are forcing so many to flee in desperation and we pray in particular for the people of Yemen, Syria, Palestine, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Iraq, Somalia, Congo and Sudan.  O Lord hear our prayer Response
  8. We pray for the staff and volunteers from the Rescue Ships, and the Alarm Phone. We think on the people serving on board of the See Eye, the reception teams on the Greek and Italian islands.    O Lord hear our prayer Response       
  9. We pray for the continuing humanity of the Royal National Lifeboat Institute and the UK Border Force, who refuse, despite government orders, to ignore the plight of those at risk of drowning at sea.    O Lord hear our prayer Response
  10. We pray for the continuing humanity of the Civil Service Unions, who resist the proposals to send those seeking sanctuary to holding centres in Rwanda. O Lord hear our prayer,  Response
  11. For an end to the arms trade and militarism that aggravate and sponsor these conflicts.  O Lord hear our prayer   Response       
  12. For an end to the economic exploitation of people, and the earth which causes poverty and displacementOh Lord hear our prayer  Response  
  13. For the strength and resilience of all citizens to resist unjust immigration laws and to support one another in this struggle.  Oh Lord hear our prayer  Response  
  14. In thanksgiving for the efforts of all who are working to rescue and welcome refugees arriving in Europe and for all who struggle for justice.  Oh Lord hear our prayer   Response  

Next Prayer Vigil

Monday 18th July, 12.30-1.30pm: Prayer Vigil outside the Home Office with Westminster Justice & Peace and London Catholic Worker to pray for migrants seeking safe passage to the UK. Contact Barbara Kentish (J & P) barbarakentish@talktalk.net 

Join the TUC ‘We Demand Better’ Demo, Saturday 18th June, 10.30am, Central London

Stop the Rwanda plan – All Refugees Welcome

As members of the Together With Refugees coalition, Westminster Justice & Peace and Caritas Westminster invite you to join us at Saturday’s demonstration ‘We Demand Better’ organised by the TUC.

Coalition member, Care for Calais, along with Stand Up To Racism, are leading a refugee bloc in the TUC demo about the Cost-of-Living Crisis in London, on Saturday 18 June 2022.

When there are social problems in the UK refugees and migrants are often blamed. As the Cost of Living Crisis worsens the government is using racism as way to divide and rule people. We say #AllRefugeesWelcome – we won’t let racism divide us. We need unity in the face of the Cost of Living Crisis. The TUC’s demo offers a great opportunity to show solidarity and unity and promote the rights of refugees.  

Let us know if you would like to join us in the ‘Stop the Rwanda plan – All Refugees Welcome’ bloc by emailing Colette Joyce at colettejoyce@rcdow.org.uk or call 07593 434905.

Gather at 10.30am, Portland Place, London, W1B 1, United Kingdom

More event details

Bishop Paul McAleenan on Rwanda Deportations: “Crime is defeated by confronting the perpetrators not by punishing victims”

Bishop Paul McAleenan

Source: Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales

The UK’s plans to forcibly deport to Rwanda some of those seeking refuge in our country is shamefully illustrative of what Pope Francis has called the ‘loss of that sense of responsibility for our brothers and sisters on which every civil society is based’.

The plan is presented as a humanitarian response to combat people trafficking and smuggling yet the result will compound the suffering of those who are already victims. Crime is defeated by confronting the perpetrators not by punishing victims. This scheme will increase the difficulties of those hoping for a new beginning, and it does nothing to address the problems which cause people to flee their homes.

Migration is a complex issue, but it is not resolved by delegating our roles and responsibilities to other countries. Our starting point should be the innate dignity of every person, created in the image and likeness of God. Our Christian faith demands that we respond generously to asylum seekers whose dignity must be protected and upheld.

Whether or not the flight to Rwanda takes off today we are now in a new situation. With greater force we insist that asylum seekers are not commodities for profit, nor are they problems to be rejected and deported by government. Instead we should be guided by the four verbs provided by Pope Francis in our approach to migrants and refugees, ‘Welcome, protect, promote and integrate’.

Bishop Paul McAleenan
Lead Bishop for Migration Issues

Bruce Kent RIP,  June 2022 – Tribute by Barbara Kentish

By Barbara Kentish – former Westminster Justice and Peace Fieldworker

My friend and neighbour, Bruce Kent, died on Wednesday 8th June, aged 92. 

Bruce’s witness to peace is well known and has been well documented by national press obituaries.  As General Secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, he was constantly in the public eye, and he initiated the British wing of the international Catholic movement Pax Christi.  A member of the International Peace Bureau, he operated on an international platform.  His Christian start point led him on a journey of six decades, culminating in a joint award for himself and his wife, Valerie, from the Archbishop of Canterbury in 2021, dedicated to

‘Bruce Kent and Dr Valerie Flessati – The Lambeth Cross for Ecumenism – for exceptional, tireless and lifelong dedication to the Christian ecumenical search for peace, both individually and together’

His simple, though not simplistic, Christianity best explains his staggering contribution to public life. 

Here I wish to add a few notes about his witness in our corner of London, and particularly in Justice and Peace work.  This was a natural forum for Bruce, a frequent presence in local gatherings.  He and Valerie began a Justice and Peace group in their Tollington Park parish in North London, where they excelled at practical ways to raise local awareness of global injustices.  A fundraiser for the Comboni Sisters’ nursery in Bethany highlighted the Palestinian conflict, while a Remembrance Day service raised awareness of global trouble spots, currently affecting fellow parishioners, while recalling the two world wars. In the community, he supported the Finsbury Park Mosque and the Citizens UK anti-knife crime campaign. Totally hands-on, he supported the ESOL classes I ran for a couple of years at his parish – his duty simply to unlock doors and ensure the heating was on!

More seriously, he confronted the MP of the neighbouring constituency, a nervous David Lammy, on the renewal of Trident.  Alas, Mr Lammy’s then post as a minister in the Blair government kept him to his official support of Trident, later recanting, but only when in opposition!   

One of Bruce’s constant cries was for better participation of the laity in the running of church matters.  He and Valerie served on their Parish Council for many years, supporting the routine tasks, such as bazaars and concerts, as well as promoting justice and peace causes. When A Call to Action, the movement for more collaborative working between laity and clergy emerged, Bruce supported it wholeheartedly, seeing a diocesan pastoral council as a logical step forward and attending many meetings, till the movement hit barriers of inertia and opposition.

He could often demonstrate a lighter touch in his core concerns for peace and anti-militarism, and many will have fun memories of the annual Children’s Peace Walk he helped organize through Central London, where, dressed as Sherlock Holmes, he would encourage children and their parents to ‘Search for Peace’!  Likewise, his picnic party games in nearby Finsbury Park generated great merriment.

A fortunate opportunity arose around 11 years ago when a nearby parish closed, making church buildings available.  With Fr Joe Ryan and Westminster Justice & Peace, Bruce facilitated the arrival of the London Catholic Worker house of hospitality for refugees in Haringey.  It was to draw on the support of many local parishes and individuals, inspiring many to reach out to destitute asylum seekers. 

As diocesan Justice and Peace fieldworker, I came across (ill-informed) hostility to his politics quite early: for instance at a deanery meeting one priest told me that ‘Bruce Kent and his boys’ should be demonstrating outside the Pakistani Embassy rather than outside South Africa House, for the right of Christians to practice their religion in safety.  South Africa was long since free of apartheid by this time, and Bruce was in fact privately supporting a Pakistani prisoner. 

In all of this work, of course, Valerie Flessati was a constant collaborator and initiator of schemes.  All were delighted when they jointly received a Lambeth award in 2021 from the Archbishop of Canterbury. The wording quoted above says it all.  Bruce worked in partnership with Valerie, for their neighbourhood, their parish and our diocese, which have all benefited from their endeavours.

For Bruce, as for all the Justice and Peace movement, justice was indivisible: whether nuclear weapons, apartheid, freedom of religion, the rights of prisoners, or those of the laity:  he embraced all issues, with his amazing energy and intellect.  He leaves a huge gap. 

Read to tributes to Bruce Kent on his website – and add your own

Cardinal Vincent Nichols recalls Bruce Kent’s ‘indomitable spirit’

Bruce Kent Obituary – Independent Catholic News

Next Vigil Outside Home Office – Monday 20th June 2022, 12.30-1.30pm, UNHCR World Refugee Day

All are welcome to join us for prayer and reflection at the next monthly Vigil outside the Home Office, Marsham Street, SW1P 4DF, on Monday 20th June 2022,12.30-1.30pm.

This month’s Vigil takes place at the beginning of Refugee Week on UNHCR World Refugee Day.

This year’s theme for World Refugee Day:
Whoever. Wherever. Whenever. Everyone has the right to seek safety

We remember:

  • those who have died trying to reach the UK,
  • the many victims of the war in Ukraine
  • those who work with asylum seekers in detention centres, and those who are homeless
  • those who struggle to inject welcome and humanity into our legislation.

For further information contact johanmaertens@hotmail.com or barbarakentish@talktalk.net

Links

Refugee Week, 20-26 June 2022. Theme: Healing

Refugee Week 2022: Stories of Welcome. Monday 20 June, 6.00-8.00pm. Farm Street Church (Arrupe Hall), 114 Mount Street, London, W1K 3AH. Joint event hosted by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster and the Anglican Dioceses of London and Southwark. Join us to hear stories of our churches and parishes across London welcoming refugees, migrants and asylum seekers. Free. Book in advance with Eventbrite.

Bruce Kent, peace campaigner, has died

Bruce Kent. Image by Lawrence Archer

Bruce Kent. Image by Lawrence Archer

Source: Independent Catholic News

It is with great sadness, but deep gratitude for his life and gifts, that Bruce Kent’s family announce his death, on 8 June after a short illness. He would have been 93 on 22 June.

At the time of his death Bruce was a Vice-President of CND, a Vice-President of Pax Christi, and Emeritus President of the Movement for the Abolition of War.

After national service in the Royal Tank Regiment and a law degree at Brasenose College, Oxford, Bruce Kent was ordained a Catholic priest for the Diocese of Westminster. Between 1958 and 1987 he served in several London parishes, as secretary to Cardinal Heenan, and as the RC Chaplain to the University of London.

It was his Christian faith that brought him to reject nuclear weapons as fundamentally immoral because, even without their use, nuclear deterrence itself depends on a willingness to commit mass murder.

As a leading spokesperson for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament in the 1980s, Kent became well known as a formidable opponent of Margaret Thatcher’s defence policy at a time when public opposition to the acquisition of Trident, and Cruise missiles, was escalating.

With his warmth and wit, Bruce Kent was a popular speaker with audiences of all ages from primary schools to pensioners’ groups. His commitment to innumerable peace and human rights campaigns over many decades included the Campaign Against the Arms Trade, for the reform of the United Nations, and the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (which came into force in 2021). He was always actively concerned about the welfare of prisoners, especially those maintaining their innocence, and prison reform.

Among his heroes was Franz Jägerstätter, the Austrian farmer who was executed in 1943 for refusing to fight in Hitler’s army. As recently as 15 May, Bruce Kent took part in the annual ceremony in Tavistock Square, London, to honour conscientious objectors throughout the world.

He was an Honorary Fellow of Brasenose College, and in the past year was awarded the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Lambeth Cross for Ecumenism.

Bruce Kent is survived by his wife, Valerie Flessati, his sister Rosemary Meakins, sister-in-law Ruth Kent, and their extensive families.

Baroness Helena Kennedy QC said: “I have known Bruce Kent since my student days in the early seventies when he was Catholic Chaplain to London University. He was a huge influence on my life and his commitment to peace and human rights was inspirational. He wanted a more compassionate and inclusive Church and a more decent and just society. He lived out his faith in everything he did – for the marginalised and the poor – and he gave his all with such a great sense of fun. He was one of the finest human beings I have ever met.”

Malcolm McMahon op, Archbishop of Liverpool, and President of Pax Christi England & Wales said: “Peacemakers across the world will saddened to hear of the death of Bruce Kent who made a lasting contribution to the peace movement within the Christian churches and much farther afield. Bruce became well known and influential in his national role in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and with Pax Christi, the international Catholic Peace Movement. His clarity of thought and deep Christian faith brought light and direction to many people wrestling with the complex arguments around war and peace. Personally, I’ll miss him for being a wonderfully warm human being. May he now rest in the Peace of Christ to which he dedicated his life.”

Paul Rogers, Emeritus Professor of Peace Studies at the University of Bradford, and President of the Movement for the Abolition of War gave the following tribute: “For more than fifty years Bruce was an utterly determined advocate for peace, and a relentless campaigner against the idiocy of nuclear weapons. He never let up and was forever optimistic and inspiring, even at the most difficult of times.”

Reiner Braun, Executive Director of the International Peace Bureau said: “It is seldom we call someone a ‘peace hero’ because, as peace activists we are generally against such terms. But Bruce was one of these historical peace figures with his deep, lifelong, emotional and argumentative engagement for peace. We are doing everything to continue the work in his spirit.”

Kate Hudson, General Secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament: “Bruce Kent transformed the scope and confidence of the anti-nuclear movement beyond all recognition. His leadership of CND in the 1980s was the embodiment of integrity, creativity and sheer determination. Bruce’s razor-sharp intellect, together with his humour, tireless work, intolerance of flannel, and total commitment to his faith and principles, made him a leader of our movement beyond compare. He will be much missed.”

Bruce, together with his wife, Valerie, was a stalwart activist for Justice & Peace in the Diocese of Westminster, attending many events locally as well as nationally and giving encouragement to many other Catholics. He will be sorely missed – Colette Joyce

Cardinal Vincent Nichols recalls Bruce Kent’s ‘indomitable spirit’

Update on Rwanda Deportations from Care 4 Calais

Source: Care 4 Calais

The refugee support organisation, Care4Calais, are challenging government proposals to begin deporting asylum seekers to Rwanda as soon as 14th June. They circulated the following update on 6th June:

We are now working with 80 out of the 100 people that the Government have sent ‘Notices of Intent‘ saying that they will be sent to Rwanda. 17 have received notices to say their deportation is imminent, ten of which mention 14 June. They are all in detention centres and they are all very scared.

Priti Patel says the Rwanda plan will offer migrants “an opportunity to build prosperous lives in safety”. However every single one of the people we have spoken to is shocked and traumatised at the thought of being forcibly sent. We’ve had a five day hunger strike and numerous late night conversations with people who feel suicidal. One said “They can send my dead body to Rwanda, but I would rather die than go there”.

The Home Office say they are only sending single men to Rwanda, but the reality is that they are sending men who are not accompanied by their wives, children or other dependent relatives at this point in time.

The reason that many embark on these incredibly dangerous journeys is that they see it as the only way to find a safe future for their families. I spoke to a man from Sudan who left his wife and unborn child in a refugee camp where they could be trapped for many years if he did not find an alternate future for them. His journey took two years and has left horrific scars, but now he is terrified he has let them down. If he gets sent to Rwanda he may never meet the child that was born after he left.

Another man will be forced to leave his 16 year old brother behind in the UK, and another, the wife that he came here to join and has not seen for three years. Many are fearful of the effect that being sent to Rwanda will have on their families back home.

We have not yet been told how people are selected to go to Rwanda but around a third of those we are talking to in detention are from Sudan. The next biggest group is from Syria. In our experience this is not representative of those who generally cross the Channel.

By contrast, we only have three Afghan refugees in our sample with a Rwanda notice – yet we are told that Afghans make up 25% of those crossing in small boats.

Two of the boys say that they are just 16 years old. The Home Office say they are 23 and 26 so it is essential that proper age assessments are done before any deportation takes place. One 16 year old saw his brother killed in front of him when his village was raided in Sudan. He escaped and went back later to find the whole village gone.

We estimate that over 70% of those with Rwanda notices have suffered torture or trafficking either in their home countries or on the incredibly dangerous journeys they have made. As a result, many have serious physical and mental scars and are finding the intense stress of detention, coupled with the threat of being sent Rwanda, intolerable.

One man who endured extreme torture in Libya told me that every time the door to his room bangs shut it gives him flashbacks to being tortured in Libya. This makes him feel like he is going insane.

Every single one of these people has a devastating account of the horrors they have escaped from in their home countries. Be it war, torture or persecution, they are all difficult to hear. The fact that our Government is putting them through the intense trauma of a deportation to another dangerous future is simply barbaric.

I spoke to another man who was tortured In Libya. They broke his nose and his shoulder twice; he has scars on his back and stomach from being electrocuted. He said “Things like that can happen in Libya, there is no government and it is lawless. But I never expected to be put in prison in the UK for committing no crime.”

He said that when he was being tortured the one thing that kept him going was hope in the UK as being a place where fairness and equality exists. Now, being told that the UK will forcibly deport him to a country that has been condemned for human rights violations smashes that hope to pieces.

That people believe that the UK is a good place that will treat them fairly is something we should be proud of; that throughout the world the UK is a beacon of all that is good is an amazing reputation that we could now lose.

The ‘logic’ to the Rwanda plan is that we take people who, by definition, have escaped from the very worst things in this world, who are so desperate they are willing to get in frightening and flimsy boats to cross the Channel, and present them with something that fills them with even more terror in order to deter them from coming. Is this really what we as a civilised nation want to do?

There is a more humane and civilised solution right in front of us now. If we gave all refugees visas to cross the Channel, in the same way we do with Ukrainians, no one would need to risk their lives in small boats, and people smugglers would be put out of business overnight. This must be possible – we are taking seven year’s worth of Channel refugees in our 200,000 Ukrainians this year.

Over the four day bank holiday weekend the Care4Calais access team and our fabulous refugee volunteers have worked right through to stay in touch with everyone, sort out paperwork, keep people up to date and reassure them. We cannot thank them enough for their efforts. The work of this team is essential; more than ever given the Nationality and Borders Act. We are raising funds for a new caseworker and need all the help we can get. Please donate now – no amount is too small to help bit.ly/c4caccess

What can I do?

Plans to send asylum seekers to Rwanda have been criticised by a number of Christian leaders including Catholic Bishop Paul McAleenan. Read – Bishop Critical of Rwanda Plans

Visit Care 4 Calais website – Stop Rwanda

Write to your MP – Bail for Immigration Detainees Website

Sign the Parliamentary Petition – Stop the Government’s One Way Ticket Plan

Demonstrate – Demo Dates and Venues

Former Irish diplomat to speak on ‘Hope’ at NJPN’s July 2022 Conference

Philip McDonagh

Philip McDonagh

Source: National Justice and Peace Network

The opening address at the 2022 NJPN Annual Swanwick Conference is to be given by Philip McDonagh. In his talk, ‘Towards a Civilisation of Hope,’ he will speak of a hope that requires courage and action for the sake of the future.

Several hundred J&P activists from around the country are expected to attend the 44th annual conference of the National Justice and Peace Network of England and Wales on 22-24 July 2022 at The Hayes Conference Centre, Swanwick, Derbyshire. The theme is: ‘Hope is a verb with its sleeves rolled up.’

Philip is co-author of the recently published work ‘On the Significance of Religion for Global Diplomacy’ (Routledge 2021). He is Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Humanities and Director of the Centre for Religion, Human Values, and International Relations at Dublin City University.

As a serving Irish diplomat and Political Counsellor in London, Philip played a part in the Northern Ireland peace process in the build-up to the Good Friday Agreement. He later served as Head of Mission in India, the Holy See, Finland, Russia, and the OSCE (Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe).

Philip has published poetry and works for the theatre, including ‘The Song the Oriole Sang’ (Dedalus Press, Dublin, 2010) and ‘Gondla’, or ‘The Salvation of the Wolves’ (Arlen House 2016), a translation of Nikolai Gumilev’s Irish-themed play written during World War 1.

Another conference speaker is Fr Patrick Devine SMA of the Shalom Center for Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation. A missionary priest, he has 25 years of experience helping to mitigate conflict and poverty in Africa. The Conference Chair is Tim Livesey, CEO of Embrace the Middle East, who works with Christian partners in Egypt, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Syria and Iraq.

Revd Ruth Gee, a Methodist Minister and one of NJPN’s Patrons, will lead an Ecumenical Service on the Saturday.

Further details and booking form for the NJPN July Conference at: www.justice-and-peace.org.uk/conference/

For more conference details visit: www.indcatholicnews.com/news/44571

Westminster Justice and Peace E-Bulletin June 2022

Last week we heard the staggering news that the number of people displaced from their homes owing to violence, conflict or persecution passed 100 million for the first time.

United Nations Report

“It’s a record that should never have been set,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi. “This must serve as a wake-up call to resolve and prevent destructive conflicts, end persecution, and address the underlying causes that force innocent people to flee their homes”.

This month in the UK we mark Refugee Week from 20-26 June 2022 and the E-Bulletin Diary Dates highlights a number of events, especially from London Churches (of all denominations), as a means of engaging with the needs arising.

At the request of Bishops Paul McAleenan and Nicholas Hudson, our next Westminster Social Justice and Peace Forum will continue to support these efforts with a coming together to explore our Catholic response to migration, alongside all other sectors of society. This will be our first in-person Forum since the pandemic and we warmly invite you to join us at St Aloysius Church Hall, Euston, on Saturday 17th September, 10am-1pm, whether you are already involved in accompanying refugees, have personal experience of migration or are newly concerned and wanting to do more. 

Register for ‘To Accompany Refugees’ – 17th September 2022, 10am-1pm

There are many other events to explore, including a day out at Kew Gardens with CAFOD, Caritas and Justice & Peace during the summer holidays on 9th August and, of course, the NJPN national annual gathering at Swanwick 22nd-24th July.

We wish you all an enjoyable few days over the Platinum Jubilee bank holiday.

The Jubilee Walk of Faith, 3rd June morning

All are welcome to join people from many different faiths for this walk across London to mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

Walks start from three points – Regent’s Park Central Mosque, Shepherd’s Bush Central Gurdwara & the Battersea Peace Pagoda – and converge at Westminster Abbey for a celebratory lunch.