Report from Westminster Social Justice and Peace Forum, 17th September 2022: ‘To Accompany Refugees’

Watch Bishop Paul McAleenan’s Summary of the ‘To Accompany Refugees’ Forum meeting

On Saturday, 17th September people from around the Diocese of Westminster joined Bishop Nicholas Hudson and Bishop Paul McAleenan for the Westminster Social Justice and Peace Forum on Zoom.

The theme of the forum was ‘To Accompany Refugees’, and took place on the weekend proceeding World Day of Migrants and Refugees.

The forum was chaired by Bishop Nicholas Hudson who underlined that this was an opportunity to explore what the response in the ecclesial community in Westminster has been.

The session was opened in prayer by Barbara Kentish. Barbara adopted a prayer that she uses at the Justice and Peace Vigils that she organises outside of the Home Office. During the forum there were presentations from the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS), Compassionate Communities, Newman Catholic College and St Bartholemew’s Church in St Albans.

Watch the Speaker Presentations

Megan Knowles, Communications and Development Manager for JRS UK, spoke about the experience of accompanying refugees in an increasingly hostile world. She spoke about the primary work of JRS being accompaniment, and specifically the accompaniment of people experiencing destitution as a result of being given no recourse to public funds. This looks like ‘being with, rather than doing for’. She spoke about how people at this point in the asylum system are in a ‘legal-limbo’, isolated with significantly reduced access to healthcare during a prolonged and anxiety inducing time. JRS supports in a variety of ways, including having a hosting scheme, a pantry and befriending.

Pattie Gercke is the Development Worker for Compassionate Communities, which is the social action arm of the Diocese of London. Pattie presented from the ecumenical perspective and how churches in the Diocese of London are engaged in the welcome of people seeking sanctuary. Ecumenism was a strong theme of the forum. Pattie shared that church response looked like practical support such as access to work, ESOL provision, hosting, education, healthcare, digital access, provision of food, clothing as well as legal and rights-based support. The value, however, of non-material forms of support was highlighted; for instance the importance of relationship, sitting, sharing space, listening and providing spaces of welcome. Further, it was highlighted that churches are repositories of social capital and that this social capital can be used to support integration. The importance of enabling a wider audience to hear the stories and theologies of people in the asylum system was discussed.

The forum then heard from Danny Coyle who presented the school experience, specifically the transformation of Newman Catholic College in Brent when they became a school of sanctuary. There had been an immediate positive effect of welcoming and integration sanctuary seeking pupils and their parents in the school. They developed a unique and bespoke curriculum to meet the needs of those coming from overseas from conflict zones. There was a particular focus on language which enables pupils to unlock other parts of the curriculum, which pupils were keen to embrace. The academic needs of pupils are placed alongside their emotional needs, and pupils are entered onto different pathways. The school has a Refugee Coordinator. Support of Caritas Westminster for the school’s annual Syria Summer Camp, where pupils take part in varied and enriching activities. These camps have gone from strength to strength with volunteers from a sanctuary seeking background being involved. The key takeaway was that if correct structures are put in place, refugee students and their families can flourish.

The final presentation came from Teresa Clarke who is a parishioner at St Bartholemew’s Parish in St Albans who is directly involved in refugee accompaniment through the Church’s conversation group. Teresa shared how ecumenical work, as well as responsiveness to the needs of the asylum seekers that they are supporting has transformed the project. The group provides emotional and practical support to asylum seeking men at a local hotel and works with 10% of residents. The value of engagement with local MPs was underlined, with the group having strong connections with Daisy Cooper MP. The group is part of a network with other churches in the area providing support. The group hold forums to hold the hotel to account with regards to need for good food and appropriate clothing for the guests. Alongside this the group held a refugees Information Exchange where asylum seekers shared experiences and information, offering help and support. There is a significant challenge of transport, where the location of Noake hotel is a barrier to asylum seekers making connections in the city. This lead to an initiative whereby spare bikes were donated, and so far, the project has received 55 bikes which are fully serviced by a bike mechanic.  Herts County Council are offering Bike Ability training while the conversation group support as they gain confidence in these sessions.

After the presentations, attendees went into breakout rooms with each of the speakers to discuss questions relating to the topics that had been presented. These were:

What are the most effective ways to assist refugee and migrant groups, what are the challenges and what else can we do?

It was an opportunity for discussion before joining back with the main group to share experiences, observations and questions.

Plenary Feedback

  • How to balance being with and doing with. Context of the whole person. How to accompany people who have and are experiencing trauma.
  • Partner with expert services.
  • How to support people, especially women facing domestic violence.
  • Ecumenical working and that how could operate
  • Joined up working between churches, looking at modeling St Albans, not working elsewhere necessarily.
  • Working alongside interfaith groups
  • Joined up working
  • Campaigning and advocacy more difficult, fundamental systems change – HO not listening.
  • Range of needs for refugees and asylum seekers, different circumstances and needs.
  • Challenges because of the cost of living. Need of financial assistance, winter, facing difficulties.
  • Challenges getting churches to communicate.
  • What else can we do – sharing information, what is going on where.
  • Need for greater awareness of what is going on for asylum seekers.
  • Hard to balance the media portrayal of refugee help as a very hard thing;
  • How to keep people compassionate enough to help?
  • Keep learning from other people and always try to be flexible;
  • The best answer to the question is to share experiences.
  • How to stop the work of helping people from being overwhelming?
  • Think of how we speak about these matters language wise.

The Forum was summed up by Bishop Paul McAleenan, lead bishop for Migrant Issues, saying ‘Refugees are not statistics, but heart and flesh, human beings who must be helped.’

Westminster Caritas Refugees and Migrants Mailing List

Rosa Lewis, the Caritas Westminster Lead for Refugees and Migrants, convenes a quarterly meeting for everyone in the Diocese of Westminster concerned about refugees and migrants. To be added to her mailing list please email rosalewis@rcdow.org.uk

Home Office Prayer Vigils

You are warmly invited to join Barbara Kentish (Westminster Justice & Peace), Br Johannes Maertens (London Catholic Worker) and others to participate at the vigils outside the Home Office or to pray along at home on the third Monday of every month, 12.30-1.30pm.

Next Vigil: Monday 17th October 2022, 12.30-1.30pm

Venue: Home Office, Marsham Street, SW1P 4DF

Contact: Barbarakentish@talktalk.net  or johanmaertens@hotmail.com    

At the vigils we remember:

  • those who have died trying to reach the UK. 
  • victims of the war in Ukraine.
  • workers with asylum seekers in detention centres.
  • those supporting homeless migrants.
  • those struggling to inject welcome and humanity into our legislation.

Links

Also reported on Independent Catholic News –
https://www.indcatholicnews.com/news/45517

Together With Refugees – Fill the Skies with Hope campaign, 23rd September – 9th November 2022. Coalition action across the UK to end the Rwanda Deportations plan.
https://togetherwithrefugees.org.uk/fill-the-skies-with-hope/

Bishop John Sherrington’s reflections on this year’s visit to Syria Summer Camp, hosted by Newman Catholic College
https://rcdow.org.uk/news/summer-camp-helps-refugee-children-find-a-safe-home/

Report from the Pre-Diocesan Synodal Assembly Westminster Cathedral,19th February 2022

Source: Diocese of Westminster

On a windy Saturday 19th February nearly 200 people from more than 90 parishes and 20 schools, as well as representatives from other communities braved the weather to gather in Westminster Cathedral to hear the summary of findings from the listening events that took place all around the diocese in November and December that launched the synodal pathway. Many could not be present on the day as transport was disrupted in the aftermath of Storm Eunice.

Bishop Nicholas Hudson opened proceedings by explaining that ‘although a great deal has been achieved already, it really is only a beginning’ and that ‘the work we’ve done up to this point will now move forward in two directions’. 

The diocesan report would be sent to the Bishops’ Conference, who will collect the findings from all dioceses in England and Wales. This report would in turn contribute to the submission to be prepared by the Bishops of Europe, which in turn will form part of the discussion at the World Synod in Rome in 2023.

Additionally, he added, ‘we shall seek to capture for ourselves what the Spirit is saying to us as a diocese, by coming together at the end of 2022 or the beginning of 2023 for a diocesan gathering where we will review our priorities for evangelization, informed by all that we have collected from the synodal process thus far.’

He thanked Danny Curtin for the work he had done to facilitate the process thus far, handing over to him to share the feedback from the listening process with the assembly. 

Synodality

The report dealt with responses by the faithful in a number of areas, which included the response to synodality and what it means to be asked to contribute to the life of the Church in this way. There were positive experiences of life in the Church, as well as sadness about those who were missing from the Church. 

The responses emphasised the importance of accompanying each other and listening to the voice of the Holy Spirit, so as to accompany one another as we journey together.

The presentation of the findings was followed by small group discussions, whose responses were shared with the wider assembly.

The Cardinal then summed up the responses and reflected on what was said that day. He explained that, for him, there were four themes.

Golden thread

The first was a golden thread that has emerged from this process of a deep love for the Church. ‘It is utterly central to how we go forward together,’ he said. ‘Only this love of the Lord and of the Church can keep us together and responsive to each other, and to the Holy Spirit.’

The second theme was the ‘great sensitivity towards those people and ventures who are “missing”, who feel left out or distanced’. He acknowledged that ‘these aspects of our life together are not well-known and they are certainly not embedded in the entire life of the diocese,’ that ‘there is much to do,’ and, ‘there is experience and achievements to help us to do so.’

He spoke of the desire to listen to each other, but that there are ‘many other voices that we hear and listen to’, that there is an opportunity to learn from these voices, but that ‘we want to do it in a way that points to the person of Jesus as our model and our grace.’

And, finally, he pointed to the day’s Gospel reading about the Transfiguration, which teaches us that Jesus is the source of all we are and do.

The day concluded with a Liturgy of the Word. Preaching on the the Gospel Reading of the feeding of the multitude, the Cardinal noted that St John ‘addresses the seeming impossibility of the mission given to the Church by Jesus.’ Like the small boy whose resources are sufficient to feed a great multitude, ‘this great sign and demonstration of God’s faithfulness’ shows that, while we have so little, ‘we are granted so much!’ This, he said, enables us to resolve to be as faithful as possible to that invitation, to that mission.’

Resources from the day:
Feedback from the synodal listening sessions
Cardinal’s synodal gathering summation
Cardinal’s homily at the synodal gathering
Photos from the synodal gathering

Report of Findings

In autumn 2021, parishes, schools and communities in the diocese took part in listening events to listen to each other and to discern what the Holy Spirit is saying to the faithful, in the first phase of the synodal pathway initiated at the request of Pope Francis. The following is the report of the findings, which was presented at a pre-synodal gathering in Westminster Cathedral on 19th February 2022.

There is an audible relief, thanks, an immense gratitude in the voices of the people of our diocese during the synodal journey.  We heard people say:

  • ‘I’m 77 and no one has ever asked me about this.’
  • ‘Children loved their voices being heard; they felt passionate about having their say in the future of the Church.’

The listening and sharing within synodal conversations, one-to-one and in groups, was, for many, a rich experience. Many particularly noted the richness of the sharing between those who took part in synodal conversations.  The conversation was described as

  • ‘A wonderful experience’ and ‘heart-warming’
  • Listening to others has had a positive and humbling effect on me and has strengthened my faith as a result.
  • We’ve been learning to listen more to others and realising the Holy Spirit is speaking through them.

But there was sadness and disappointment too, that more people did not engage. And some were doubtful that it would achieve anything. One person shared an appeal to Pope Francis, asking that now expectations have been raised to ‘please fulfil on the promise of listening’. And others appealed to priests and our bishops to ensure that this synodal journey continues.

There are many thousands of adults and young people in parishes, communities and schools that did engage. People came together in person as well as sharing in writing. 

For many this experience is already having an impact on their community life. One parish shared:

  • This synodal process has drawn us closer together and closer to God. Spiritual conversations are continuing regularly after Mass. More opportunities to pray together are being established.

Cardinal Vincent invited us to begin this process by reflecting on our experiences of journeying together during the pandemic. 

The experience of the pandemic was incredibly hard, but people shared how they have discovered things about our faith and about our life as members of the Church. Some spoke of the synodal process as almost like a catharsis, a contribution to the recovery needed after lockdown:

  • Sharing experiences of pandemic in the synodal sessions was very moving and heart breaking. Tears were shed but talking about experiences brought a measure of healing.

For many this was a time of heightened awareness of the gift of faith, of the Church community, and particularly of the celebration of the Eucharist, and the richness of our worship and prayer. Of course, at first, this was a realisation born out of not being able to access much of what we had previously taken for granted. But through this experience, the joy of the faith was entered into more deeply. 

  • One person shared that it was like preparing for First Holy Communion again: a rejuvenated faith.
  • There was a sense that things were being stripped back to the essentials: to spirituality, simplicity and service of others.

That renewed engagement with spirituality came through the Church entering people’s homes and families, through online Masses. People spoke of a sense of unity with the whole family of the Church, a feeling of being part of something bigger.

But also, there was discovering, rediscovering, of other aspects of faith: in shared family prayer time, saying grace before meals, in the support of an online prayer group, WhatsApp groups, the rosary, reading and praying with scripture. People shared:

  • I went to stay with my brother for three months in the early days. We prayed the Mass text together. We would very seldom have prayed together otherwise.
  • My faith grew by being able to regularly attend Mass via livestream. After my sister died of Covid, I know God’s grace touched me.
  • ‘Visiting’ churches online for Mass and hearing other homilies stirred up a desire for more understanding of scriptures.

And the simplicity, people realising what was important. The sacraments, yes, ‘many shared the sheer joy in returning to Mass after lockdown’, but also the community, the need to know we belong and the simplicity of knowing God’s presence:

  • Introduction of stewards had the additional benefit of making church more welcoming, creating an enhanced sense of Church being family.
  • God remained present … God was with me when I was doing home schooling.

We heard of rediscovering the aspect of service, too. The outreach to those in need was a central focus for many parishes: recognising the isolation and needs of others, and responding. Thousands of young people, too, identified this in their synodal conversations in schools. As one school shared:

  • The pandemic has taught us the importance of others, of their company, compassion and love.
  • One headteacher reflected on the role of Catholic schools: The Holy Spirit was present in how we lived out the mission, in the way we pulled together during the early stages of the pandemic.  

Our diocesan communities reaching out to those isolated, too. Like St Joseph’s working with those with learning disabilities:

  • We endeavoured to keep in touch with all students throughout the lockdown and take into account each individual’s likes/dislikes and hobbies … some beautiful work was created. Some partnerships beyond the Church were developed with ‘technology charities’ in order to keep those vital links open with students.

You can see some of that work in the Cathedral Hall today.

The pandemic also has highlighted areas of sadness, and for some, experiences of hurt and pain:

For many, being cut off from the physical celebration and reception of the Eucharist was very hard. Some admitted envy they developed for priests who were still able to be physically present at Mass.

Some parishes were well connected and people felt supported. Several parishes shared how they had reached out through email and digital means, a huge step forward for them. But other parishes spoke of data protection laws as a significant barrier during the pandemic, preventing parishioners from helping the most vulnerable. 

Others felt their parish closed; it seemed that the priest withdrew and no support was offered. And there was sadness shared for those people who felt isolated, cut off from their community through ‘oversight’, digital disadvantage, age, or worry about returning during the early easing of restrictions. Some of the voices shared were heart-wrenchingly honest:

  • In true London style we tended to leave each other alone.
  • I have no access to anything via TV or computer. I used to say the rosary to go to sleep. 

There was sadness, born from the concern of the people, for their priests, knowing they were alone, perhaps without any support. Yes, throughout the synodal conversation there were times when people shared frustrations, even pain caused by priests. It’s still clear that there is also a deep love for priests (and deacons and religious) in our diocese.

Young people shared their sadness too. Some of them felt ‘forgotten about’ by their parishes during lockdown:

  • I was very, very alone as an only child when my school and church were closed. 
  • Some students have still not returned to regular church attendance and mentioned how they miss this sense of community.
  • Some children have had their First Communions delayed or were saddened that this important Sacrament lacked the sense of celebration they had imagined.

Some of the sadness and pain encountered during the height of the pandemic remains. Some people have not returned. And there is a deep desire from others to see them come back. Some people, even, blaming themselves: 

  • I took it personally that people didn’t come back. What am I not doing well?
  •  There’s a deep longing for social activities in the parish to resume and for opportunities to pray and to do good together. 

Others remain very disappointed that the churches were closed at all and that the Sunday obligation was not upheld, that in some way Church leaders gave in to politicians. Perhaps this is an expression of the sense of loss they experienced at being separated from the Eucharist, and some spoke of blaming the Church leadership.

Others experienced the lack of Sunday obligation as an opportunity to reflect. In some way, they feel, ‘going to church on Sunday’ has been made the ‘marker’ of being a good Catholic. Is this an opportunity to reflect on how we live our faith more actively in the world? 

Within the synodal sharing is a call to recognise the experience that many people went through, losing family members and prohibited from being with dying family members. Some people will have felt very acutely the ‘absence’ of God in their lives.  Reconnecting with these people may be a great challenge.

As we end this section, we can note how reflecting on the pandemic during the synodal process has inspired people to realise some encouraging insights: 

  • Before the pandemic I’d just come to Mass, not talk to anyone and leave quickly. Now I talk to everyone.
  • We still care. We want to be connected. We want the Church to thrive.

Wider Experience 

The synodal conversations led us to share about our wider experience of journeying together in the Church. 

We reflected on three aspects:

Our communion, or community with one another, in union with God; 
Our participation in the life of the Church;
And our experience of the Church’s mission, proclaiming and living the Gospel.

There are parishes and communities celebrating a real sense of belonging, with opportunities for people to participate and engage in living their faith with a wider community.

We heard of the importance of the spiritual life of Catholic communities. The Eucharist, prayer, and the Sacrament of Reconciliation as a means of healing. Key moments were often talked about. Both the times of joy, baptisms and weddings, and also times of sadness, funerals in particular. These are key moments when faith nurtures, bringing strength and love. 

We heard of the love of worship and music, from all across the Church’s tradition:

  • Great joy from heartfelt worship of God with all the beauty our frail humanity can muster
  • Attending the Traditional Latin Mass means I have never been more engaged with my faith.
  • The Praise Group we founded is uplifting, joy obviously present, as people spontaneously lift their arms.

There was also heartache and disappointment shared about aspects of community, participation and worship. In particular, sadness at our lack of making a real effort to ensure children and young people can participate in the Mass. 

There were people who were deeply saddened in their experience of being restricted from the celebration of the Old Rite. And those who shared experiences of tension between preferences for traditional versus more contemporary worship.

It was also striking to hear from those who said they do not feel welcome. One parish summary shared how the Church can feel like a ‘closed shop’ to many. This was reflected elsewhere:

  • I feel very disconnected from the Church, but I still go every week to pray.
  • ‘As new arrivals, we went to the more “local” church and were told that if we lived in our postal area we needed to go to another church.’
  • I didn’t feel included. I came from another faith and got baptised, but only three or four people welcomed me. I thought I wasn’t welcome, or that I had done something wrong.

This sadness was shared more generally. Many felt that somehow we have seemingly reduced our participation in the church community to going to Sunday Mass and home again. As one parishioner reflected, perhaps it is in fact us, the ones who are going to Mass, who are missing from the wider life of the Church.

There was much shared about the wider life of the Church, in particular the Church as a force for good in the world. There were many examples of reaching out to the homeless, those in food poverty, and to the world in need overseas. And stories of our own parishes, schools and communities reaching out to one another:  

  • Our parish community is well served: the sick, the housebound, when someone is in crisis.
  • There was one lady who was repeatedly mentioned by the students at St Joseph’s. The students shared memories of praying with her at the Saturday clubs and doing jigsaw puzzles, meeting friends, singing songs.

There is a sense of joy from those sharing in the ministry of the Church, such as the Eucharistic minister bringing Eucharist to the sick and housebound. And people shared their appreciation of the pastoral support they gain from the Church and from their faith, especially strength and peace drawn from faith when in need. 

  • ‘A parishioner expressed deep appreciation for the prayer and support they had experienced when their marriage partner was taken sick. When their own faith wobbled, the community helped them hold on.’

For many, faith provides a foundation of guidance, of steadfastness, a moral compass. There is joy discovered in times of sharing faith and building relationships with others, including though our ecumenical friendships.

People express joy in the diversity seen in our parishes and schools, with different nationalities, cultures and different ways of celebrating faith and living Church. The experience of being able to attend Mass in their own native language, or feeling welcome as an immigrant into our churches was appreciated. Many did share that feeling of oneness, of unity and community, of belonging. 

But many others do not see themselves valued or represented in their churches. For some, that’s because the leadership seems disconnected from them, or the liturgy is not inclusive, or the art, architecture and culture is unreflective of them:

  • The Year 6 pupil who shared ‘whenever I go to church no one looks like me, and the images on the walls and windows, there’s no one who looks like me.’ 

There is great sadness, too, in recognising who is missing, or those who experience themselves undervalued or unwelcome. Whilst diversity may exist in our communities, people shared that not everyone is properly included and valued.

It’s hard not to listen to the thousands of voices across the diocese without hearing that a significant area of concern shared here is the experience of the role and place of women in the Church.  This was shared by women and men, young and old, from within and beyond the Catholic community. 

People experience how women do a huge amount of work in and for the Church but they go unrecognised. School students across all ages shared sadness, disappointment and even anger about the Church’s attitude to women, saying ‘women are suffering in the Church’. It was poignant to hear how women and girls do not feel included: 

  • ‘I have a tension in me, as a faithful Catholic, every time I go to Church, as I don’t feel included.’
  • ‘A girl in Year 7 shared that she had to move parishes as her priest does not allow female altar servers.’   
  • Our children were brought up Catholic but now do not practise, because of the attitude of the Church towards women.
  • Why is it that women are still so unimportant, yet make up the vast majority of your congregation?

Throughout the diocese there is also another area of significant sadness: questioning how welcoming we are as Church to LGBT people, or those in different types of relationships … people who are divorced and remarried, and single parents:

  • ‘The Church’s stance on sex and sexuality is alienating, is given disproportionate weight, and does not reflect core Gospel values of love, forgiveness, compassion, mercy and care for the poor and sick, and social justice.’
  • ‘Every single student [in one school] mentioned LGBTQ+, women, divorced, single parents.’ 
  • Some young people spoke of family members who are part of the LGBTQ+ community and who they worried would not be loved by God or accepted by the Church. 

Those sharing as part of the LGBT+ Catholics ministry in the diocese appreciated being embedded in diocesan and parish communities and recognised the welcome that is given at the start of their twice-monthly Mass. But beyond this it can still feel that they ‘are rendered invisible’.

Sadness too is in the constantly repeated cry for our youth to belong and be included and reached out to. And a feeling that anyone who is different, with different life experiences, mental health issues, disabilities, may not feel included. Our churches in particular are not accessible to those who are deaf, those with intellectual disabilities, and perhaps even those who experience financial poverty. We are not seen as a Church of the poor, but rather a Church of material wealth.

Our schools were perhaps prophetic on who else is missing from our communities. Students across our diocese reflected on how sinners may not be being made to feel welcome. Almost every school shared this. One school shared it this way:

  • ‘Lost Sheep’, criminals or people who have sinned and avoided church may not feel comfortable if others know what they are like. 

Prisoners, in particular, were spoken of many times by schools and by some of our parishes, a sense that they are not extended a welcome from the Catholic community. And prisoners themselves, sharing their experience in a synodal conversation in Wormwood Scrubs with Cardinal Vincent, asked that the wider Church does not forget them;

  • One inmate spoke of the regular letters he had received, throughout his nine-year sentence, from a parishioner of his home parish. He was much strengthened by a card he had received at this time, signed by 40 parishioners, most of whom he did not know, assuring him of a welcome back. 

We heard many times from those who feel saddened that individuals from other Christian faiths feel unwelcome, as they are not able to participate in Communion at a Catholic Mass. Some people find this divisive, as one person shared:

  • I don’t feel the Catholic Church is very welcoming to outsiders. I get the impression you would only visit the church if you were a Catholic.  As a Christian I would like to feel more welcome.

Disappointment also surfaced when considering people’s experience of participating, or not, in how the Church makes decisions. Although some told of efforts in collaboration, this was not embedded, and sometimes likely to be ineffective. Weak parish councils were cited as examples of how we’ve not achieved meaningful co-responsibility yet. Priests acting outside of parish council structures, rendering the lay people feeling nominal at best, or even hurt and overlooked. 

And more generally there are voices sharing how there is a lack of authenticity and transparency at local level:

  • We are excluded from decision making. Many good lay initiatives come to nothing.
  • I’m afraid our parish feels fake most of the time. I’m sorry to say this but it’s been like this for 30 years plus.
  • Church leaders are like untouchables. They are cut off from the laity.
  • Our priest is constricted by Church leadership.
  • There is a lack of transparency in the finances of the Church.

The lack of authenticity and transparency is heard most starkly with the deep pain, hurt and shame caused by sexual abuse by clergy and Church leaders, and the cover-ups which followed. We heard of that pain, disappointment and blame often: 

  • Church image became more important than integrity. 
  • I have lost trust. 
  • For me the hardest thing to fathom is how anyone called to live a religious life could ever justify the cruelty that took place.

The woundedness of the people in parishes and communities impacted by the knowledge that priests have abused was clear in the synodal conversations. But more profound was the plea for the Church to listen to survivors of abuse and to respond.

Another area is a tension between the longing for the Church to be pure and not dilute its teaching, and others sharing sadness that that the Church appears not to move with the times. First, there is first a deep love and longing for something: 

  • ‘The Church is the mother of all her children and children should respect and obey their mother.’ 
  • The pressures of ‘commercialism’ and ‘received wisdom’ from social media channels need to be counteracted with a stronger reiteration of Christian values.

But there are also voices which share an experience of stuckness which even extends to a tempering of the Church’s mission:

  • There is a sense of conservatism within the Church which resists any change.
  • There is too often a sense of comfort in familiar settings that can lead to a disregard for those on the margins who are truly in need.

Reflecting on participation also led to a recognition that so much is undertaken by so few. There is usually a small group of people doing most things in our communities. It was felt that the commitment of volunteers is sometimes taken for granted or they are undervalued by the leaders. And yet there was a deep recognition that priests and deacons are burdened so much. 

The love for priests and desire to have more connection with them was shared by schools, too. School leaders noted that priests are less visible, less connected, now than in years past. Previously it ‘felt that the priest cared to be in school, but now asking, Why don’t the priests come in anymore?’

Finally in this section, there is, however, an appreciation of priests, and concern for their wellbeing:

  • I honestly think that priests are in a position where too much is demanded of them.  Like any caring profession – dealing with the community is time consuming and mentally and physically demanding

Final Section

In this final section we will draw together some of the insights which people shared about what is the Holy Spirit might be saying to our parishes and communities and to the Church in Westminster.

This was a synodal journey of people who loved the Church, who wished and wanted good things for the Church, the people, its leaders, the mission, and for the Church to be seen and known as a sign of hope, faith and love in the world. 

It is worth noting that there was some focus on Church doctrine, sometimes separate from the ‘synodal’ focus of sharing our experience of journeying together. And sometimes very directive statements of what the Pope, the bishops, priests or people need to do: how we should be stricter, or not; how children should be taught particular aspects of the faith; or which teachings should be changed. All of this has clearly still come from a place of love for the Church. Whilst we cannot always capture the elements which fall beyond the scope of the synod, we have tried to listen to these in the context of the wider experiences which were shared. 

As we said at the beginning, there was an appreciation of the synodal process, and a surprise at the fruits which have already flowed from it. 

And within this sharing people have moved towards gathering the fruits and discerning what the Spirit might be saying. 

As we reflect on this, we will group them into several areas. They are not perfect but they may help:

1.  Participation and synodality 

People felt that the Holy Spirit is prompting us to ensure that listening and sharing continues. One parishioner reflected that they realised they had always experienced participation in Church, as if being treated like a child, directed what to think, and opinions never sought. But this, they felt, was different. 

The positive experience of the synodal events has led to a desire for increased connection and participation: encountering one another, listening and sharing in the journey of the faith community.

  • This synodal process has revealed that when we listen in silence the Spirit works wonders. We desire to continue ‘journeying together’ seeking the inspiration of the Holy Spirit to make use of all the gifts and talents of the community.
  • The synodal path was a great experience of touching unknown realities within our parish and seeing how God can make us one though so different.
  • Discernment must lead to decision, action and implementation.

2. Liturgy, prayer and formation

As we’ve said, the pandemic has particularly led to a realization of the riches within our liturgical and spiritual tradition. There is a sense that the Spirit is leading us to rediscover these and share them. Some people spoke of the capability of the Church to offer a wide range of ways for people to engage with worship, prayer and liturgy.

Some reflected that the Synod sessions have increased their hunger to understand scriptures and to apply them to everyday life. There was a beginning of discerning how to do this, as well as creating more opportunities for formation in faith, prayer and how to share faith: 

  • A palpable sense Jesus is calling us to ‘Come and drink deeply’ from him;
  • A desire for workshops to teach prayer and exploring the gospels and other areas of Catholic teaching;
  • Could the Holy Spirit be encouraging us to look to him to show us a way where the beauty of tradition can merge with the creativity of the modern for the praise and glory of God?

3. Diversity and inclusion

There is an overwhelming sense that people feel the Spirit of God is calling us to be more welcoming and inclusive, valuing all: 

  •  ‘The Holy Spirit is promoting a sense of gratitude in us for all people.’ 
  • ‘The Church must not just be welcoming but truly valuing.’
  • ‘We dream of a Church which welcomes everyone and does not discriminate… a Church where everyone can use their particular gifts and talents…a Church which helps those who are marginalised.

As we have said, several aspects emerged, not least the role and place of women.  Whilst there was sharing about consideration of women priests, and perhaps more so about women deacons, most discernment about the valuing of women was not solely focused on ordination:

  • ‘We dream that women may be more trusted, and their charisms used.’
  • ‘We need to reflect on the power and gifts of women in the Church better.’

Unsurprisingly there was also some reflection on allowing married priests, developing in part out of the experience of seeing the overburdened nature of priests and the loneliness that people perceive. And whilst, potentially, that is shifting beyond the scope of our synodal conversations, it undoubtedly leads us to ask about what the Holy Spirit might be saying to support our priests?  

LGBT people were also a focus as people discerned what the Spirit might be saying. 

Overwhelmingly people of all ages shared of the dream of creating a Church where people feel genuinely included and valued whatever their sexual orientation. 

Others went further and felt the Spirit of God might be moving us to explore a developed theology rooted in pastoral realities and recognising that LGBT+ people are a gift to the community, shifting Church language and making positive restoration for some of the hurt caused to LGBT+ people from discriminatory attitudes within the Church. 

And also a recognition that we need to follow the Spirit’s prompting to ensure no one is left on the margins. This will mean practical solutions. As one school put it:

  • ‘More accessible Masses to those who are deaf and visually impaired using sign language and screens; more forgiving, less judgemental; more home Masses; parish priest phoning people.’

4. Outreach and encounter

One parish discerned the need to move beyond the organised outreach that the Church is used to, outreach to the homeless, those in food poverty etc, to also consider how to reach out, include and value everyone in the midst of their lives: 

  • How do we reach out to others, e.g. single mothers, those who struggle in daily life or those disaffected by the Church, ‘shy’ parishioners?

Inclusion and outreach to young people was also a stand-out area of discernment. There were some reflections on the need for professional youth workers and deacons to be paid to help, more youth socials, and more youth-friendly liturgies:

  • How can the parish create a framework to help young people to have an active role in the parish after Confirmation, so they don’t feel left out?

And also from our schools, reflecting on how, for them, the social teaching of the Church is a ‘hidden gem’ when working with young people. How could this be shared more?  

Whilst our relationships with other Christian traditions and other faiths were celebrated in some synodal conversations, there is a clear desire for further growth in our collaboration, and in particular our responsibility to work for all Christians from all denominations to be united together:

  • Are we reaching out effectively to other local churches?  Past and present efforts, including foodbanks, are fine, but what more could be done? Could we organise more inter-faith prayer groups, learn more about their outreach efforts, mirror more of their evangelisation?  

And there was a sense that there is so much more possibility to extend the Church’s communion, participation and mission in our work for justice and social outreach:

  • The Holy Spirit is calling the Church to loudly, clearly, emphatically and repeatedly state that refugees are welcome in our parishes.
  • How do we engage with climate change and justice? How do we deal with the challenge that most people don’t know the rich moral resource of Catholic social teaching?
  • Pupils mentioned the Pope’s encyclical Laudato si’ and said how they would like for the Pope to write more letters, particularly about the environment.

Summary

In summary, it might be useful to note how the word accompaniment and the image of walking together arose in the synodal sharing:

  • Be outward looking, accompanying those in difficulty with love but always bringing to them the joy and truth of our faith.

One way to summarise the discernment is to see how there were dreams of accompanying people in four different ways:

  • Accompanying people in life

The Church needs to be ‘walking with the people in the messiness of life’. Trusting in and knowing the presence of the Spirit in everyone, and valuing everyone without exception. Bringing people into a relationship with God … helping people discover how ‘God wants to be involved in every facet of their lives, wants them to be happy’.

  • Accompanying the parish community

To build a place of belonging, a home, with formation, education and accompaniment in developing co-responsibility for our common mission.

  • Accompanying the world in outreach

A Church which is poor and loves and ministers on the margins, ‘known, loved and perhaps hated for prioritising the poor and marginalised Church should be more prominent [in its] values and beliefs’.

  • Accompanying one another, continuing the synodal journey of encounter, listening and sharing

Building on this pathway and continuing to discern together the presence of the Spirit of God in our experience of journeying in the Church. And encountering others: other Christians, other faiths and the wider community, cultures, learning from others, and encountering God in one another.

Westminster Social Justice and Peace Forum, 4th November 2021 – Synod Pathway: Online Listening Event

Pope Francis has chosen this time to call the whole Church into a deeper process of listening to one another – the Synodal Pathway. There are many ways to get involved in the Diocese of Westminster.

Everyone involved in social action, advocacy and peace-building is especially invited to our own Online Listening Event with Bishops Nicholas Hudson and Paul McAleenan on Thursday 4th November, 7-9pm, on Zoom.

Register for the Social Justice and Peace Online Listening Event

There may seem to be many demands on us but it is important that we pause and take time to truly listen to one another, sharing both our joys and our hurts, if we are truly to journey forwards together.

As well as existing activists and named Parish Contacts for Justice and Peace, we are keen to ensure that this is a time of genuine openness and inclusion so those who would like to join the Forum for the first time are most welcome, priests and parishioners alike. 

We hope to see many of you there as we begin – or, as Bishop Nicholas writes in his invitation below, continue – a conversation that will have far-reaching implications for the Church of the third millennium. 

Invitation

What is the pandemic teaching us about the call to Social Justice and Peace?‘  That was the question with which we launched into our first online Forum last Advent. ‘What is the Catholic vision of work?‘ launched the second Forum in May. And what rich fruits these questions reaped!

We heard in the first gathering about the extraordinary food outreach achieved in this Diocese.  We heard both the pain and joy experienced by people of colour through belonging to a West London parish.  We heard the call for a ‘radical reset’ of our social and economic systems.  We heard in the second event how much parishes stand to learn from Catholic Social Teaching. In short, we were learning from each other what it means to be Church!  We were beginning to see how much more we need to do to become more truly Church.  But we lacked the vocabulary to tell each other that what we had embarked on was, in fact, a Synodal process. Now we realise we had! 

On Thursday 4th November, 7-9pm, the Forum reconvenes and invites you to deepen the Synodal conversation.  The Forum is hosting a ‘Listening Event’ online in which we shall continue this process we began 11 months ago – of listening to our experience of what it means to be Church.  It will be a marvellous opportunity to come together with others who share a passion for Social Justice and Peace – to hear from one another what the Spirit seems to be saying to the Church.

Then we will be encouraged to take the process into the different groups we represent and given guidance as to how then to feed this back into the centre towards a Diocesan submission.  Do encourage all those with whom you share a yearning for the Church to realise her vocation to Social Justice and Peace to come and be a part of this Listening Event.  I look forward to joining you there on this next stage of the journey!

+ Bishop Nicholas Hudson

Register for the Social Justice and Peace Online Listening Event

Report from Westminster Social Justice and Peace Forum, Saturday 22 May 2021: ‘The Catholic Vision of Work’

Rosa Lewis, Caritas Development Worker for North London, writes:

May started with the Feast of St Joseph the Worker and then two weeks later Rerum Novarum – the seminal encyclical on the rights and dignity of workers – celebrated its 130th anniversary. Against this backdrop, Westminster Justice and Peace convened a gathering on The Catholic Vision of Work.

Rerum Novarum, nearly a century and a half later, remains as pertinent as ever – some of its calls have been enculturated into working practices, whilst other gloomier portents have become even more acute. The gathering provided a space for people across the archdiocese to look at the contemporary reality of work and how the Catholic vision of work can interact with and transform that reality.

Rosa Lewis

The gathering (chaired by Fr Dominic Robinson SJ) was led in prayer by the Diocesan Evangelisation Team, and opened by Bishop Nicholas Hudson. Dr Pat Jones, Vincent Fernandes, Kathy Margerison, and Fr Chris Vipers shared their perspectives on the topic before the plenary took place. Daisy Srblin summarised before the event was closed by Bishop Paul McAleenan.

So what is the Catholic vision of work? This question first requires us to question our assumptions of what work is and what it looks like, perhaps even reflect upon what our past experiences of work have been like. Has work been an experience of injustice, enjoyment or perhaps both? The Catholic vision of work might require us to change our working practices and habits of consumption – this is a necessary challenge.

Work, by its nature, is solid; even if sometimes it seems ephemeral or non-tangible – the act of making, doing and influencing change the reality around us. As such, the Catholic vision of work requires us to be creative and dare to imagine the kind of world we would like to see. It becomes incumbent on us to be discerning and responsible co-creators, who in so doing create the conditions in which others can flourish.  “I found the input from speakers and attendees alike so inspiring with each contribution shedding new light on the function and meaning of work. It is conversations like these that will shape the future of work and influence the trajectory for the 140th anniversary of Rerum Novarum ten years from now!”    

Introductory Remarks from Bishop Nicholas Hudson
lead bishop for Justice and Peace:

It’s my privilege and pleasure to welcome you all to this Social Justice & Peace Forum, in which we’re going to be exploring ‘The Catholic Vision of Work’. It’s a very logical follow-on from the last Forum, in which we asked what the pandemic was teaching us about the call to Justice & Peace.

That question seems more urgent than ever as society gets back to work; because the pandemic has opened our eyes to see the sheer scale of poverty and inequality in the United Kingdom; just how many are falling through the social safety net; how the poor are getting poorer – especially those who have no work. Society is waking up to the fact that it’s going to get worse, not better: inflation is already upon us, unemployment and homelessness are bound to increase. The Catholic vision of unemployment is unequivocal: unemployment is a “real social disaster”. Resort to a gig economy, with zero-hours contracts, is leaving increasing numbers of families still with too little income to put food on the table.

Into this reality the Catholic Vision of Work needs to speak ever more urgently.

The right to a just wage and the right to rest are central to it – as is the right, as Pope St John Paul II put it in ‘Laborem Exercens’, “the right to a working environment and to manufacturing processes which are not harmful to the workers’ physical health or to their moral integrity.” Of course, Catholic Social teaching doesn’t mention working from home as such: we’ve only now woken up to all the issues around that – because the pandemic forced us to.

But human flourishing has long been at the heart of a Catholic Vision of Work; and work environments which foster human flourishing after the pandemic are surely going to be part of our discussion today.

As is the impact on the environment itself. It was St Irenaeus who said, in the early Middle Ages, “By his work … man (man and woman) … makes (make) creation more beautiful.” By their work, man and woman make creation more beautiful. That’s a statement which speaks even more deeply to us now, I think, than it did even 14 months ago – because we’ve become sensitised, through reflection, observation and discussion, to the impact on creation of all our different ways of working.

How the air and our children’s lungs were spared by our not driving cars into work or flying across continents for meetings was brought home to us by the bright, bright blue skies of April and May last year!

“Just look at that sky!” I remember one homeless man telling another in Leicester Square.

The vital impact on family life of the way we work has become all the more apparent too: we see all the more clearly the prophetic wisdom of the Holy See’s Charter on the Rights of the Family, when it said, “Travelling great distances to the workplace, working two jobs, physical and psychological fatigue all reduce the time devoted to the family.”

“Life to the full” was Jesus’s message and hope. But what are we going see as the net outcome of this pandemic? Life fuller or life reduced? Some re-skilled, others de-skilled; some with priorities reordered towards a better quality of life, others left with the sense of a life diminished. If some do emerge stronger for work, others will find the decline of their physical and mental health, the stress of strained relationships at home, months of isolation leaves them frighteningly incapable. Loneliness, economic uncertainty, changed work-conditions will all have taken their toll.

All of this goes to make up the altered geography and landscape we find ourselves inhabiting as the world returns to work – or doesn’t! And I’m looking forward to each of us helping the other to deepen our perspective on it for a few hours today.

Presentation: Dr Pat Jones – The toad and the altar

So; take a moment to reflect on what work has meant in your life: it probably takes up more time than anything else except family life; certainly more time than Church activities. Has it made you feel valuable, or given you a sense of meaning? Has it been a crucial part of your identity? Or the opposite? Philip Larkin’s famous poem begins ‘Why should I let this toad work sit on my life?’

Well, the Catholic vision of work isn’t about toads. Rather, it proposes that work is part of what gives our lives meaning and purpose; part of what it means to be a human person. In CST, work shapes us as moral persons.

To put this in practical terms, think about nurses and other medical staff in the pandemic. Rachel Clarke wrote recently about their determination to sit with people who were dying alone, to hold Ipads and read letters from loved ones. Did they do that because they were already compassionate before they became nurses? Or did the work to which they were committed draw that out from them?

Let’s also put two other examples on the table, before we move to CST principles, two stories recently in the media.

The first is the British Gas workers who fought back against the company’s decision to fire and rehire a large proportion of its workforce of engineers, compelling them to accept new contracts with longer hours for the same pay, removing extra pay for working week-ends or bank holidays. Around 3-400 would not accept and lost their jobs, many of them lifetime British Gas workers.

The second is Deliveroo, a prime example of the gig economy, precarious work, paid by the number of deliveries, with no guaranteed hours or rights to holiday pay or sick pay. How many of our young adults have been pushed into such work in the last year? This was in a way a good news story; the stock market flotation of Deliveroo flopped, because investors thought that its policy on workers’ employment status and wages was likely to run into trouble.

 The crucial point in both these examples is that the worker matters; indeed, the worker is more important than the product, or the profit, even than the company. What was at stake in for the British Gas workers was not just an extra 3 hours a week, but the whole structure of family life, care tasks and community belonging that each worker builds around their job. Deliveroo also seems indifferent to that, viewing its couriers only as replaceable economic units.

So what does CST offer us? There are 2 basic ideas.

And just to be clear; work in the CST vision is not just paid employment; it’s also all the other ways we labour; work done in the home, work that is part of the unpaid care economy; work that is care for creation or voluntary community or public life.

The first principle is that work expresses our dignity as human persons; it is part of the goodness of our human condition; it is good for us to work. It gives us purpose and enables us to explore our potential and reach for our fulfilment. Pope Francis expressed this beautifully in a letter for the feast of St Joseph:

‘Work is fundamental to the dignity of a person. Work anoints us with dignity, fills us with dignity, makes us similar to God, who has worked and still works, who always acts.’

This means that work should be worthy of human persons; and that those with the economic power to structure work have a moral duty to ensure this, that jobs provide what we might call decent work; in which workers have a say in how it is organised and structured; where there is fairness in what they are paid; and security when they are ill or in need.

That is the ideal, the mark of a good society, But when we look around at how work is organised in our society, it’s not always the case that jobs are worthy of human persons. Some work is degrading; some is exploitative, failing to recognise people’s dignity or rights, or treating them as commodities. Yet research shows that most people would rather work than not, even in what are called ‘bullshit’ jobs.

The second is that work in the CST vision has two dimensions, the subjective and the objective.

The subjective dimension is where I began: that work makes us more fully human. It shapes who we are; it has a formative moral effect. It is not just a practical necessity, nor is it a burden, a punishment or a toad; back to the nurses, care workers, paramedics, the restauranteurs who turned to feeding homeless people and many others. And that formative effect works too when work is exploitative; moral senses are blurred or lost.

The objective dimension is that through work, we play a part in the creative and redemptive activity of God; we collaborate with the divine purpose which is still unfolding in our history. Our work is part of ordering created reality in the interests of the vision of the Kingdom which we receive from the Gospel.

I’ve recently been doing some research into the YCW, Young Christian Workers, a movement which started in Belgium in the 1920s and spread worldwide, but is now much smaller. The founder, Joseph Cardijn, made a cardinal in his 80s, had a prophetic vision of the task of young workers. Each young worker, he said, is more precious than all the gold in the world. He spoke often of how ‘your workbench is your altar’. In the workplace, he said, you are made lay priests, you are Christ in the workplace. He saw a parallel between the ordained priest who places the host on the paten, and the worker who places ‘the host of work’ on the workbench. He was talking of factories and workshops, offices and shops, rather than laptops and courier bikes, but the principle and the theology stand. He wanted to give dignity to young people and equip them to be activists.

Years ago when I worked in adult formation, I was trying to explain in a parish group the idea that in baptism we become part of a priesthood, and our task is to consecrate the world around us to God. A man sitting at the back looked up and said to me, ‘what I do is, I shovel up shit on Blackpool beach. That’s my job. Are you telling me that’s consecrating the world to God?’. And the answer is yes. The world of dirty work, like care work, needs re-valuing.

So those are the core principles; the rest is implications; which is where our social mission starts.

CST has covered many of them: papal texts are strongly in favour of worker solidarity, worker movements and trade unions, and on worker rights; they are also keen on worker involvement in shared ownership of companies (and I note in passing that there’s a movement of 67 worker owned co-operatives courier food delivery companies spreading across Europe; that Deliveroo gave up in Germany because they were required to give workers proper contracts and benefits). CST texts have spoken out about just wages, what we now recognise as a living wage. Our own Bishops in their 1996 statement, The Common Good, cautiously endorsed the policy of a minimum wage (before we had one), one of the few practical conclusions they drew. CST has also set out a critique of economic structures and of various political ideologies, but that’s another topic.

But we have to receive and test and enact the principles; first, do they ring true? Do they resonate with our instincts? And then, if they do, we have to examine what’s happening around us that contradicts this vision, and what we can do to change it.

The pandemic has sharpened our sight. We can see that care work is under-valued and under-paid; that gig work means people live in radical insecurity so they can’t stop work when they need to self-isolate, and so infection rates go up; that people in many other jobs, in supermarkets and transport, are key workers.

On Thursday I listened to Jon Cruddas speaking in a CSAN seminar outlining his vision of how a renewed sense of the dignity of work and its intrinsic value in people’s lives could and should become the organizing principle for a new kind of politics. He could hardly have been closer to Pope John Paul’s conviction that work is ‘the essential key’ to the social question, how we organise society, and integral also to social peace and development. Cruddas’ new book, The Dignity of Work, outlines the practical ways we can do this, paying particular attention to what we have learned in the pandemic.

And here’s the rub. For much of the 20th century, this was a crucial area of Catholic social mission; Catholics were involved in labour movements. Bishops spoke out; on Merseyside, Catholic and Anglican bishops, Derek Worlock and David Sheppard led protest marches when factories were threatened, and fought to save jobs and to face the new realities of technological change. Today, I worry that we seem to have withdrawn from this field; yet for us, the baptised, our workplace is the frontline of our mission. One of my dreams for the post-pandemic church would be that in every parish we begin to talk about our workbench, whatever it is; that we re-engage in shaping the future of work; that we agitate so that our young people have work worthy of their dignity.

Presentation: Kathy MargerisonMe and SEIDs – overview of our programmes

Kathy Margerison, Head of Programmes, Social Enterprise Ideas Development (SEIDs)

I’m the head of programmes at SEIDs. We’re a charity and we were set up by Caritas. Our mission is to create decent and dignified work opportunities through self employment and living wage jobs.  We’re a relatively new addition to the Caritas family having officially opened in January 2019.

I’m going to talk about what we do and then I’m talk about what we’ve learned about decent work over the past couple of years.

The work I do as head of programmes is specifically focused on working with people who are unemployed or on a low income and who want to start either a business or a social enterprise (which is a business with a social purpose)

 What this looks like in practice is a 12 month cohort based learning programme, for 20 participants who fulfil that eligibility criteria of being unemployed or on a low income and who want to start their own business. They move through a programme that is curated by SEIDs – and it’d made up of workshops, 121 mentoring, £500 of funding and access to a desk in the SEIDs coworking space.

The workshops are on things like business planning, finance, branding, marketing and social media. But also soft skills like confidence and mental health and are hosted by a new expert facilitator every week. What’s also really important is that we’ve created opportunities for participants on previous cohorts to deliver paid workshops as part of the programme.

In addition to what we created on paper when we set up the programme, almost the strongest and most beneficial part of it is that it has created an opportunity and space for people who are often in similar circumstances to talk, gain peer to peer support and collaborate on their business ideas.

The programme overall was really helpful. Being able to talk to people at the same stage of setting up their own business was invaluable – so many fresh pairs of eyes! The workshops were useful and they got better over time – I found the finance workshop especially beneficial. Being able to speak to the programme manager about my business was great. Before lockdown, I really loved coming to the SEIDs building – actually getting out of the house and having a place to work was fantastic. The £500 of funding helped support the development of my business – and helped pay for my website update, flyers, a course on memoir writing, life coaching sessions and advice from an accountant.

Anita Kelly, participant on the first SEIDs start up business programme

Holistic approach

A lot of the people we work with experience multiple disadvantages, it’s very rare that the only difficulty they are facing is a lack of work. They also often have, housing issues, mental health issues personal relationship issues, the refugees that we work with often have PTSD.

Sometimes I think there’s a tendency was the DWP staff to think that all someone needs is a job and they’ll be ok – but actually if that job it’s zero ours minimum wage with no benefits, there’s a chance this kind of work could exacerbate any existing mental health issues and leave the person in a worse state than when they were unemployed. So it’s about looking at everything that’s going on in someone’s life and thinking about the kind of work that will promote a sustainable livelihood as opposed to just any job because it’s a job.

I think key to making this holistic approach work is partnership work. I think there is a tendency for third sector organisations to duplicate the work that they do instead of collaborating with others. I think it’s about thinking what is your organisation best placed to do – if you’re not a grass roots organisation don’t try to be one. Instead find out what your local grassroots organisation is doing and ask them how you can add value to what they’re already offering.  And that way you work more intensively with people across multiple issues rather than just 10 organisations running the same CV session. 

Advocacy strategy around decent work

We’re in the very early stages of developing an advocacy strategy for SEIDs, one of the things we’ve been thinking about is the idea of a decent work accreditation that would use a number of metrics to assess work – and part of this would involve doing research with low paid workers around what is most important to them –so for example hourly rate, maternity pay, sick leave, holiday allowance, in work progression.  This thinking comes out of the idea that we know there are organisations, that do really well focusing on one thing, but sometimes focusing on just one metric means other things get sacrificed  – so for example when Sainsbury’s upped their basic rate of pay for all 130,00 staff form £8 per hour to £9.20 per hour in 2018 (which still isn’t living wage of course) they slashed paid breaks and premium pay for unsocial working hours.

I think linked to this is the idea of Underemployment, especially as regards to some of the refugees we’ve worked with..

Just to finish – I want to talk about funding for our work and also looking to the future.

Funding

How do we get funding to do this work?

Not just relying on grants from trusts and foundations or local authority funding but

Leveraging the support that we can get from corporates, universities and local and central government – 10% of all 100k bids to brent council have to factor in social value. This is true of other LA as well as central government.

What are we thinking about in the future? Young people and innovative programming

i) Young people: offered university or apprenticeship or a job – but what about starting their own business?

ii) Thinking about how we can be innovative – preparing people for jobs that will exist in ten years.

iii) Tech – coding for refugee women – what jobs will exist in 20 years

Reflection: Fr Chris Vipers – St Joseph the Worker

St Joseph the Worker, Our Lady of Fatima Parish, White City, West London

Those who know me know that I love to travel, and I can’t wait to do it again. And one place I need to re-visit is the Holy Land, so much on our TV screens and on our hearts at the moment. If you’ve been there you’ll know that every stop – and sometimes every whistle-stop – can become like a prayer station. From renewing marriage vows at Cana, and praying for the sick at the church of St Ann in the Old City of Jerusalem, just by the Pool of Siloam, to praying for mothers-to-be at the Basilica of the Annunciation in Nazareth. And in Nazareth, a short walk from the Basilica, is another church, the church of St Joseph, built over Joseph’s house and workshop, the home of the Holy Family. It’s a beautiful church but I think the house that Joseph built would be more beautiful still. Whenever I’ve taken pilgrim groups we’ve always paused to pray there, and to reflect on the work we’re each of us called to do, and I’ve spoken of the creativity and craftsmanship that’s written into us, into our God-given nature. Be that a child’s picture of Mummy pinned to the fridge, a student’s nard-worked on assignment, a musician’s magnum opus, a beautiful window box to brighten up your flats, or an ambulance crew at the end of a busy shift, saying “great work team!”. For a Scripture reading there I’ve always used that powerful passage from the Book of Genesis, that poetic telling of God’s masterplan, of his purpose and his design at the beginning and birth of everything, where God sees all that he has made and declares it “very good”. Joseph’s workshop, and the home he and Mary made for the Lord,  is a good place to hear that.

Naming and confessing our God as Creator, and then discovering the awesome truth that we, women and men, are created in his image and likeness, means that creativity is at the heart of who we are – creativity and craftsmanship, work and workmanship. As St Paul reminds us in Ephesians 2, “we are God’s work of art”, his mirror-image. So don’t let your gifts and talents surprise you. God made you for a reason. As our newest City-Saint, John Henry Newman, would say: “God has created me to do him some definite service. He has entrusted some work to me which he has given to no-one else”. I used that quote once in a meeting with the board of a hospital trust when I was part of the chaplaincy team there, and then I asked them who was the most important person in that hospital – chief exec, ward manager, surgeon, anaesthetist, doctor, nurse, physiotherapist, porter, cook, cleaner, receptionist, even patient! The answer being, of course, that they are all as important as each other. Each, in their own unique, God-shaped way, a work of art. I suppose that’s what we mean by the “common good”.

Theologically speaking, we are made for work because we are living, breathing, making, mending working-models of our creator, our creating, and ever-creative God.

As a model for this, and as an inspiration to discover the creativity we are made for, the Church paints us the picture of a human life, of Joseph, who she honours under the title of “the Worker” – or at least we have since Pope Pius XII gave us this Feast in 1956. Now it’s true that in imagery and iconography you are more likely to see St Joseph holding a lily (for purity, as a sign of the “spouse most chaste”), a lily rather than a lathe, a hammer or a saw. But Joseph would have known those tools – they were his tools in his creative hands. I love that throw-away line in the Gospel, that attempted put-down of Jesus, “this is the carpenter’s son, surely”. Well, all I can say is don’t knock carpenters – they’ve got nails!

We pray don’t we, in Psalm 89, “give success to the work of our hands, give success to the work of our hands”. We need to say, and we need to sing it loudly –particularly in this time of change in working patterns, in employment prospects, in the despair of redundancy or in the surprise of early retirement, in neighbourhood volunteering and in charitable service, in quiet and loving local heroism, in simple caritas, in education and in the nurturing of our young, in families and in the communities in which we are planted and in which we grow, we need to say that our working lives don’t stop until the day we die. As Cardinal Newman would pray, “and our work is done”. And that everything we do can be a work of art, even if we’re tempted not to see it that way. That meaningful work is work that means something to someone, even if it’s just me. That we could never ever be redundant. That, as Cardinal Newman puts it, “I can never be thrown away”.

In giving us this Year of St Joseph, Pope Francis accompanied his gift with a letter, Patris Corde, With a Father’s Heart. And in that letter he gives societies and governments a challenge. In the Pope’s words:

In our own day, when employment has once more become a burning social issue, and unemployment at times reaches record levels even in nations that for decades have enjoyed

a certain degree of prosperity, there is a renewed need to appreciate the importance of dignified work, of which Saint Joseph is an exemplary patron.

Work is a means of participating in the work of salvation, an opportunity to hasten the coming of the Kingdom, to develop our talents and abilities, and to put them at the service of society and fraternal communion. It becomes an opportunity for the fulfilment not only of oneself, but also of that primary cell of society which is the family. A family without work is particularly vulnerable to difficulties, tensions, estrangement and even break-up. How can we speak of human dignity without working to ensure that everyone is able to earn a decent living?

Working persons, whatever their job may be, are cooperating with God himself, and in some way become creators of the world around us. The crisis of our time, which is economic, social, cultural and spiritual, can serve as a summons for all of us to rediscover the value, the importance and necessity of work for bringing about a new “normal” from which no one is excluded. Saint Joseph’s work reminds us that God himself, in becoming man, did not disdain work. The loss of employment that affects so many of our brothers and sisters, and has increased as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, should serve as a summons to review our priorities. Let us implore Saint Joseph the Worker to help us find ways to express our firm conviction that no young person, no person at all, no family should be without work!

And then, in the fruit of his reflections compiled by Austin Ivereigh, ‘Let Us Dream’, Pope Francis invites the world to reflect on this – how can we, how will we, build back better, to bring about that “new normal from which no one is excluded”? If you and I knew all the answers to this, how it would look not just here in our London and  across our UK,  but in every village and town and city in every continent across the face of the earth, we would be the miracle makers!

As the Church gathered here, we are called simply to look and see, and to see deeply, to judge, and to judge wisely and well, and to act with what Francis calls “creative courage”. In Patris Corde he writes, “God always finds a way to save us, provided we show the same creative courage as the carpenter of Nazareth, who was able to turn a problem into a possibility by trusting in divine providence”. We need to pray this into action!

We’re called to be dreamers, young and old to see visions and to dream dreams, to dream prophetically, to be dreamers of divine human possibilities, to dream big and to dream daringly.  Joseph dreamt dreams before us, which is why we’re here today, listening to and learning from the carpenter’s son, the Saviour of the World.

I love this little reflection, and I’m going to end with it. It’s simply called ‘God’s Dream’:

I myself will dream a dream within you –
Good dreams come from me you know…
My dreams seem impossible,
not too practical, not for the cautious –
a little risky sometimes, a trifle brash perhaps…
Some of my friends prefer to rest more comfortably,
in sounder sleep, with visionless eyes.
But for those who share my dreams
I ask a little patience,
a little humour,
some small courage,
and a listening heart.
I will do the rest.
Then they will risk and wonder at their daring…
Run – and marvel at their speed…
Build – and stand in awe at the beauty of their building…
You will meet me often as you work –
in your companions, who share the risk…
in your friends who believe in you enough
to lend their own dreams, their own hands
their own hearts, to your building…
in the people who will stand in your doorway, stay awhile,
and walk away knowing that they, too, can find a dream.
There will be sun-filled days and sometimes it will rain –
a little variety – both come from me.
So come now, be content. It is my dream you dream… my house you build…
my caring you witness… my love you share…

(Unattributed)

SUMMARISER REPORT – DAISY SRBLIN

Daisy Srblin is the Director of Million Minutes, a charity dedicated to youth social action and advocacy.

INTRODUCTION

Well, that was a really rich conversation, exploring the Catholic Vision of Work, and its different dimensions, especially given the way that the pandemic has shifted experiences of work significantly (and the indignity of unemployment and under-employment.) My job is to try and summarise a two-hour conversation in 15 minutes (I’ve taken 3000 words of notes)! Inevitably there’ll be bits I miss in this summary, so I’m just going to draw on some of the key themes I’ve heard coming out of the discussion, and some questions for reflection we could take away with us.

Bishop NicholasKicked us off with a question: Post-pandemic, will we see lives more fulfilled or more diminished?

KEY THEMES OF SPEAKERS

Dr Pat Jones Explored the theology behind the principle of dignity of work.

She reminded us that we are all experts by experience – and invited us to reflect on the importance of work in our own lives. She also summarised some of the key points of around the Catholic vision of work – that it should: give our lives meaning and purpose; shape us as moral people, provides us with community and solidarity – and that in this vision, the worker matters, and worker is more important than product or profit or company – workers are more than replaceable units of productivity.

Dr Pat reminded us of the importance of revaluing work in society, not just care work, but also unpaid labour and work, the work done especially by women, that society depends on. She reflected on the Catholic Church’s role in social movements in history – and posed the question of whether we might see such activist engagement in 21st Century.

In every parish, we need to talk about our ‘workbench as our altar’ in the words of Joseph Cardijn – and explore these realities in our own communities.

Fr Chris VipersDeveloped and embedded these ideas, with the underlying theme that sometimes in society we fall into the trap of thinking that others skills are more important than our own.

He reminds us that creativity and craftsmanship that’s written into us in our God given nature – whatever our talents and skills. Jesus as carpenter’s son and St Joseph as a manual worker! Work as a means to participate in salvation – to put our talents in the service of society and community – and our working lives don’t stop until our dying day. God made us for a reason. Let’s not underestimate our skills and talents – unique to us and no one else – let us never underestimate how special our skills and talents are. We are all a work of art – Vincent’s ‘bee hive’ model of society.

Meaningful work is work that means something to someone – even if it’s just to me. I can never actually be ‘redundant’ – I can never be thrown away.  Let us dream – how can we, how will we build back better / different, where no one is excluded, in every village and town and city, across the world?

Kathy Margerisonexplored lessons learned from Social Enterprise Ideas Development (SEIDS) Caritas project in Wembley. Training and mentoring, particularly women and women of colour, either employed or on a low income to create their own business / social enterprise.

Challenged us to think bigger than the metric of unemployment – exploitative employment, undignified employment, underemployment (jobs below your skill levels) unsustainable livelihoods, longevity of employment beyond the next year or two – beyond per hour wages, the other metrics e.g. maternity policies.

From the work with SEIDs, she shared with us some lessons:

  • Need to understand the nature of multiple disadvantage and holistic approaches. Not just about employment, but the right employment, longevity, development, good standard of living, PTSD of refugees
  • We can’t do everything and there’s no benefit in duplicating efforts. So can we explore, what are we, and our communities, best placed to do? Can we collaborate better? How can we add value to their expertise? Partnership work is v important. How can parishes collaborate across communities?
  • We as employers need to have our house in order – how generous are our maternity policies, sick pay, policies, progression in work?

She challenged us to think more about young people 18-25: those who have left school – starting your own business seen as something for older people and how can we prepare for future of employment, which will look different to today.

Vincent FernandesGave us an on the ground perspective of how the pandemic is hitting the residents of Hounslow, and how the parish of St Michael and St Martin is responding.

In London – a capital city with so much wealth, but so much poverty. Vincent explained the fact that in West London the families suffering are people of colour, esp South Indian, blue collar workers, reliant on manual jobs. Vincent also explained to us how it is predominantly women of colour coming forward to accessing services. And, like Kathy, he showed us how there are all sorts of interrelated issues around dignity of work – benefits access, unemployment, decent work, mental health, domestic violence and sexual abuse, employment agencies exploiting vulnerable workers – all because of loss of jobs.

Vincent also explained how the social enterprise of Bee Hive has had to step in in absence of Council responses. Stressed the importance of parish priest participation, and service of local community. Imagine if we had that sort of social enterprise in every parish! Would be truly ground breaking – the Church making such a positive difference. Church sharing its love and resources.

Families = inter-community, from various parishes, some Catholics, some not, different races and cultures. Serving them all!

THEMES FROM PLENARY

  • Pandemic didn’t create inequalities – they just exacerbated and brought them to light
  • Power of testimony, of hearing the experiences of those on the ground – CST in practice
  • How well is the value of dignity of labour known in church spaces?
  • Sow seeds for young people who are inheriting unprecedented economic situation
  • Not everyone shares our views of work and justice in society and in the world
  • Employment of women and people of colour in the Church – putting our own house in order

QUESTIONS THAT EMERGE FROM THESE

  • What are our God-given gifts?
  • What are the skills that we have that are unique to us?
  • What does meaningful work mean to us?
  • Do we find dignity, moral formation, in our work?
  • What’s around us that contradicts this vision, and what can we do to change it?
  • And those we see around us? Do we truly see all those around us, all those we interact with, as also participating in God’s creation?
  • When we think of the dignity of Labour, do we just reflect on employment / unemployment, or are we appreciative of multiple disadvantage and complexities of such issues in present day?
  • What can the Church be saying, doing in terms of national advocacy, inspired by Let Us Dream?
  • Whatever the national advocacy / policies etc (not just UBI, but reinstating much of the benefits that have been lost over the years…) how can our local communities emulate the sort of lessons that Vincent and Kathy talked about?
  • What can we do NOW? e.g. research, understand needs, understand its beyond parishes. Vincent and Kathy show us that there’s so much that we can do. How can our parish priests take a lead? How can we support our communities, facing unemployment, underemployment and insecurity and more – how can we live out CST principles?
  • Let’s not worry about taking care only of our ‘own’ people.

So, a great number of challenges, ideas, and really inspiring stories.

Report from Westminster Social Justice and Peace Forum, 5th December 2020: ‘Learning from the Pandemic’

Source: Ellen Teague – Independent Catholic News

What is the pandemic teaching us about the call to Justice and Peace? That was the question posed by Bishop Nicholas Hudson last Saturday at the start of an online meeting of the Westminster Justice and Peace Forum on the theme ‘Learning from the Pandemic’. Bishop Paul McAleenan was on the zoom too, along with around 60 clergy, religious and laity. It was great to see such a spread of interest across the diocese – Hertfordshire as well as London – and a few joined in from other dioceses – Southwark, Northampton and Brentwood were the ones I spotted. British Sign Language interpretation was provided throughout by Caritas Deaf Service.

Fr Dominic Robinson SJ, based at Farm Street church and the Chair of Westminster Justice and Peace Commission, led us through the morning event, helping us “to look back at what we have been learning and look at what we can do to rebuild.”

Anna Gavurin, of the Westminster Caritas Food Collective, was the first speaker. She highlighted that soon after pandemic restrictions came in more than 100 projects sprang up immediately. Catholic parishes and schools were well placed to recognise the hardship in their communities. She reported head teachers driving around with food parcels, supermarket vouchers being distributed by at least 120 parishes and schools, and Church foodbanks seeing a fourfold increase in demand. As well as the humanitarian response, she felt the pandemic shone a light on the causes of food poverty – especially people with no recourse to public funds and no access to, or delays to, benefits. Caritas organised training, helping parishes and schools to see what they could do in their local area. The issue of Justice came more and more to the fore in discussions, “challenging us to think why this is happening.” She learnt the extent to which the Church is a vibrant network, ready to respond in a crisis. Also, that the Church has a voice to influence and is using it. Into the future, Caritas Westminster has developed its Road to Resilience programme: www.caritasfoodcollective.org.uk/road-to-resilience-63.php.

Dr Pat Jones, of the Centre for Catholic Studies at Durham University, talked about one of her brothers teaching in a deprived area of the North-West, and his experience of lessons being disrupted because of a “toast trolley” moving along the corridor outside to feed hungry children. She felt disturbed by that toast trolley and asked, “what has happened to the social safety net?”. Our social and economic systems are broken, she said, and “the pandemic prompts a radical reset for we must not forget what we have seen and heard and must not settle for the old normality.” She highlighted Pope Francis’ call for structural change, with a new emphasis on ‘Social Peace’ “which is built from below”. Pat deplored rising levels of domestic violence during the pandemic and the reduced number of refuges available for women fleeing partners. It was mentioned that the National Board of Catholic Women has responded with its recent publication, ‘Raising Awareness of Domestic Abuse’ and see the work of the Bishops’ Conference at www.cbcew.org.uk/home/our-work/domestic-abuse/.

Fr Richard Nesbitt, parish priest of Our Lady of Fatima Parish at White City, highlighted the issue of racial justice and reported having his eyes opened by listening to the multicultural community in his parish. His parishioners spoke of the lack of black people in leadership roles in the Church; racial imagery in artwork in Church and in cards in the repository; little diversity of musical styles. It was pointed out to him that even in the Church’s charity work there was the danger of ‘white saviour’ syndrome. “Most shocking of all” he said “was where some black parishioners regularly experience rejection by white parishioners” at the Sign of Peace in the Mass. He quoted from US priest, Fr Bryan N Massingale, that, “Catholic Teaching on race suffers from a lack of passion”. He clarified what he meant by saying, “no one can doubt what the position is on Abortion – a major marker of Catholic identity – but Racism is marked by low institutional commitment, being tepid, lukewarm and half-hearted – and so not seen as a core component of Catholic identity.” Fr Richard reflected, “this has been a journey of conversion for me.”

Marcelle Smith, gave a Catholic Schools perspective from her experience as a teacher in Colchester. She has been horrified by some materials used in classes which reinforce systemic racism. She called for more teachers from ethnic minorities and better Racial literacy teacher training. When asked about her hopes for the year ahead, she said, “Justice”.

At a break in the meeting two short videos were played which had won a Season of Creation 2020 diocesan video competition. One was from St Patrick’s Catholic Church in Neasden and the other from St Vincent’s Primary school in Ealing. In both of them participants saw the planting of seeds, bulbs and saplings. In the second a young child hoped, “that our work inspires other children to look after our ecosystem”. WOW! I didn’t even know that word ‘ecosystem’ when I was at school! See: https://westminsterjp.wordpress.com/season-of-creation-video-competition/

Colette Joyce, the Justice and Peace Coordinator for Westminster, reported that the four London dioceses – Arundel & Brighton, Brentwood, Southwark and Westminster – are planning to work together and with CAFOD next year on Climate Justice in preparation for COP26 in November at Glasgow. A Columban sister suggested that the question should be examined, ‘Is Climate Change racist?’

Feedback from groups suggested that the pandemic has highlighted for them the sheer scale of poverty and inequality in Britain; public budget priorities which would put military spending ahead of aid; Racism in society and in the Church; and a new awareness of who keyworkers are and their contribution to the common good of society. “So many people are close to the edge and our society’s fragility has been revealed” said one participant. There was a commitment to greater solidarity with vulnerable people and communities and making use of new technology for advocacy work. “How we connect digitally is really important” said another. Very specifically, there was a call to revisit the relationship between the Catholic Association for Racial Justice (CARJ) and the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales. Perhaps Racial Justice Sunday should be reconnected directly with CARJ.

Liam Allmark, of the Bishops’ Conference summed up the learning from the pandemic. Quoting Pope Francis, he said, “this is a moment to dream big, act differently and a time to heal”. In his thanks, Bishop Paul McAleenan referred to the latest publication from Pope Francis ‘Let Us Dream’ where the three chapters take the titles – SEE, JUDGE, ACT. This process – sometimes called the Pastoral Cycle – is a key process for Justice and Peace work. The final prayer came from Laudato Si’. Exuberant hymns topped and tailed the meeting, led by Mary Pierre-Harvey, the Director of Parish Youth and the Caribbean Choir at St Michael and St Martin Parish, Hounslow. The gathering aimed to provide some direction for the year ahead. It certainly did!

Presentation by Dr Pat Jones
Building Social Peace

Presentation by Fr Richard Nesbitt
Journey of a Parish Racial Justice Group