Guest Bloggers

Amnesty International: 58 years on, collective action for human rights matters more than ever

On May 28, 1961 a British barrister, feeling outrage at the injustice in our world, was inspired to act. Peter Benenson had heard of the cases of two university students – arrested, tried and sentenced during what was at that time a cruel military dictatorship in Portugal – locked up simply because they had dared to raise their glasses of wine in a toast to freedom.

Peter knew that what had befallen those two students was by no means exceptional, and that there were people in every corner of the world, jailed because of their political beliefs, their religious faith or the colour of their skin; prisoners of conscience as they came to be known.  Vitally, he also knew that he would not be alone in his sense of outrage. 

So Peter Benenson set out to harness that collective concern and turn it into a force for change; a force for justice. In 1961 he did not set out to found a global human rights movement.  Less ambitiously, but with a force of determination that soon involved countless others, he launched a year-long campaign for “amnesty” for those he called the forgotten prisoners, encouraging people to write polite letters to political leaders around the world, calling for freedom for women, men and young people who never should have been detained in the first place.

Critics and naysayers thought that Peter Benenson was delusional. Why would people want to take time to write letters on behalf of people they had never met and never would, who lived in countries they would never visit?  And why would cruel despots care what a plumber in Manchester, office worker in Helsinki, grandmother in Melbourne or college student in Vancouver had to say?

But Peter Benenson was not delusional; he and every activist who flocked to his campaign were in fact visionary.  People do care enough about the rights of others to write a letter; care deeply in fact.  And even tyrants worry about world opinion; not always, but frequently enough that we know that global pressure can and does make a difference in the face of grave human rights violations.

Peter’s modest ambition of sustaining a year long campaign did grow into Amnesty International, which has grown to become the world’s largest human rights movement, has been honoured with the Nobel Peace Prize, and is present on the ground today in all corners of our globe. 

Here in Canada Amnesty International has 400,000 supporters who actively take up cases close to home, notably the pervasive human rights violations experienced by Indigenous peoples in the country; and campaign for an end to atrocities in countries such as Yemen and Myanmar and protection for courageous human rights defenders in countries like Colombia and Honduras.

And 58 years later, sadly, Amnesty International has, in many respects, never been more important. 

Far too many countries continue to be devasted by the ravages of war and armed conflict, with an agonizing list in 2019 that includes Yemen, South Sudan, Syria, Myanmar, Afghanistan and Libya.

Far too many politicians – including in the United States, Brazil, the Philippines and a growing number of European countries – win elections by promoting policies of hate, fear and division; with the most marginalized in our societies being targeted for threats and violence.

Additionally, we know that the rapidly spiraling impacts of climate change pose what is fast becoming the most urgent human rights challenge of our time; yet continues to be met by denial and resistance by far too many governments and powerful economic interests.

It may seem overwhelming.  It may very understandably lead to the question, what difference could I possibly make? Just as it did in 1961.

And that is why the Amnesty International vision still holds true.  The problems are immense and may seem insurmountable.  But there is always one thing you can do right now to make a difference for one person, or for one community, or for one country.  And there is a friend, co-worker, neighbour, relative or fellow student who you can urge to join you in that effort; and another and another… 

That is where change comes from; it always has and always will. That is also the vision of the Sisters of St. Joseph community, a spirit of solidarity and collective responsibility that has been of such immense support to Amnesty International’s human rights efforts over the years.

Today, we cherish that close connection; and together we renew our commitment.  Together, tomorrow and all the tomorrows to come: we will press on and we will not relent until the glorious promise of universal human rights protection is a reality for everyone, everywhere.

Alex Neve, Secretary General,

Amnesty International Canada

 

 

 

 

The Minister Lady - Called to Serve

In this day and age, there is a tendency to call all and sundry ‘guys’ (so tiresome, to say the least, don’t you agree?).  So, the other day I am caught off-guard when someone in the hospital where I work addresses me as ‘minister lady’.  To my knowledge, this title is notably bestowed on women of nobility or claimed by singers like Stefani Germanotta aka Lady Gaga, but not on a hospital chaplain. Furthermore, it is rare these days that a woman in general is called a ‘lady’, and in my eleven years as a hospital chaplain I have certainly never been called ‘minister lady’.  This accolade caused me to pause and reflect on all that is entailed in my daily ins and outs as a ‘minister lady’.

  As I mentioned already, I have been a chaplain at Victoria Hospital, one of Canada’s largest, most diverse hospitals, for close to eleven years.  For this ‘minister lady’ it has been both a challenge and a blessing. It has been the context of vast experiences, unsettling at times yet always inviting me to welcome and embrace the opportunities to learn, to grow, to think outside the box, to embrace the constant changes in health care - to ‘enlarge’ my heart. 

Some of you probably know that London, Ontario, is by far not as diverse as is multicultural Toronto.  However, since Victoria Hospital is a regional hospital, patients come from a wide geographical radius.  The hospital is, furthermore, connected to Western University which caters to a huge student body from many different countries and has a large medical student and nursing student body.  On any given day at the hospital there are not only patients of many different cultures and ethnic groups.  There are doctors, nurses, residents and student nurses who are Canadians or foreigners, believers or non-believers, Christian or non-Christian, Catholic or Protestant, Muslim or Jewish, Mennonite or Amish.  And here am I, the ‘minister lady’, a member of a Religious Congregation, in this government hospital with its multicultural milieu just maybe making a small difference in the lives of those to whom I daily minister.

Though I am hired by the Catholic Diocese of London to provide pastoral care for Catholic patients, people of just about every other denomination and nationality also daily cross my path.  In my diverse encounters with Catholic patients I have supported families who are confronted with the sudden death of a child, with patients who received devastating news of a cancer diagnosis, parents coming to terms with the loss of a still born baby.  I have been asked to support palliative patients contemplating the option of MAID (Medical Assistance in Dying) and parents who were advised to have a genetic termination because their baby had severe abnormalities.  All of these encounters were opportunities to set aside my personal beliefs, my values, and any lingering prejudices in order to support these people.  I have sat with a homeless woman admitted for mental health challenges due to drug abuse whose life at first glance looked so very different from mine, and yet I felt such compassion for her in her plight. Listening to her talk about her pain, her difficulties, her struggles, quickly made me realize that we were just two women who each have their struggles, who, in fundamental ways, were not that different from each other. 

Along the way, I learned to handle different theological stances, often being challenged to think outside the proverbial box and am often amazed by how much more we have in common with people who ‘seem’ at first glance so different from us.  Again and again I am invited into the chaos of people’s lives, learning to engage the differences, to widen my heart, to listen and support, to being non-judgmental.  Within the last year or so I have, for example, become increasingly aware of the incredible challenges parents of transgender teenagers face and have become the confidant of staff who struggle to cope with teenagers who are dealing with gender dysphoria, which, by the way, is becoming a far greater phenomenon than many of us perhaps realize. 

Talk about being stretched, constantly embracing the new and different.  All these various pieces of the kaleidoscope of my work as a ‘minister lady’ at the hospital have proved to be a gift and a blessing, albeit in disguise – and often an emotionally draining one.  Many a day I go home thinking to myself, now I have seen it all, and then a new challenge comes along, a new invitation to make room in my heart, in my ministry as a ‘minister lady’ to be a co-creator in building God’s kingdom.       

- Sr. Magdalena Vogt, CPS

Catholic Women In A League Of Their Own

The Blue Community project was invited to speak at two Catholic Women's League events this past April. This adds to a recent presentation Sr. Linda Parent (CSJ) gave to CWL members in Windsor also in April.

Thanks to the collaborative contacts by many CSJ Sisters (notably Sr. Bonnie Chesser in Sudbury), Paul Baines was invited to present about this Blue Community project as an example for exploring and experiencing Pope Francis' Laudato Si': Care For Our Common Home.

CWL is celebrating its 99th year and wants to focus more on Laudato Si', especially the crises and call to action around water. What follows is a short summary of Paul's presentation with a link to all the slides at the bottom. A final thanks to the CWL leadership for inviting this Project into their 2019 agenda and for all their curiosity, care, and commitment. Stay tuned for more about this collaboration.

Our Blue Community project has several elements, one of the first being place -- place matters. It matters because Canada would not exist without land treaties with the Indigenous nations who have lived with these places for thousands of years. Place matters because we would not be here without the water. It not only surrounds us, but is within us. Let us honour this water and all the neighbours we share these lands and waters with. Since being forgotten can lead to marginalization, let's make the invisible more visible and remember that all of Creation needs our attention, not just humans.

To read the entire piece please visit our Blue Community Website 

ecojustice

We stand at a pivotal moment in time.

Thanks to numerous supporters including the Sisters of St Joseph, Ecojustice is ready to build on the valuable progress that we have made as we tackle the greatest challenge of our era: climate change.

Around the world, young people — afraid for their future yet inspired by 16-year-old Greta Thunberg of Sweden —are resolutely raising their voices to demand greater climate ambition from world leaders.

The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued a special report last year with the stark warning that global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions must halve in the next decade and reach zero by 2050.

We must act now if we are to stay within 1.5 degrees of pre-industrial levels and avoid catastrophic climate change.

Since the IPCC report was released, Ecojustice’s message that government must take meaningful action to lower Canada’s GHG emissions has been amplified – and our successful track record of using the power of the law to defend your right to a safe climate has continued.

Amidst the world’s heightened threat of rising sea levels, forest fires, mass species extinction and climate related human health issues, we are seeing sprouts of hope through the courts.

Last year, two Ecojustice victories prevented an additional 21.9 million tonnes of heat-trapping gases from entering the atmosphere each year. 

First, we stopped the expansion of a coal transfer facility on the Fraser River, which would have carried four million tonnes of thermal coal by open-car rail from Wyoming through communities in Vancouver’s Lower Mainland, bound for foreign markets. Ecojustice played a key role in the local Port Authority’s decision to cancel the permit for this project.

Stopping this proposed expansion prevented 6.9 million tonnes of CO2 emissions from being released into the atmosphere annually and protected the health of communities from exposure to coal dust.

Second, Ecojustice’s successful Trans Mountain lawsuit saw the Court confirm that the federal government cannot legally approve an industrial project based on a flawed environmental assessment — in this case, an assessment that ignored the impacts of marine shipping on endangered orcas.

By halting construction on Trans Mountain, we stopped more than 15 million tonnes of additional carbon emissions from polluting our climate each year. And that’s not all.

Earlier this year, Ecojustice also secured a major win for wild salmon. The Federal Court issued a decision that struck down the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans’ policy of not testing for a contagious virus widespread in open-net fish farms off the coast of British Columbia.

In its ruling, the court made clear that government must take a precautionary, science-based approach to managing fish farms, which includes considering their impacts on at-risk wild salmon populations.

These victories are a testament to what we can accomplish when we work together.

Transition can be hard to notice when you are in the middle of it, but each victory signals that we are making the changes that our planet needs to avert disaster — and is a testament to our collective power.

Ecojustice’s combination of law reform, litigation, and public outreach will achieve accountability in law, combined with durable governance frameworks to strengthen and sustain the efforts of the current and future Canadian governments to combat climate change.

Together, we will protect precious carbon stores like Canada’s boreal forest and accelerate the transition to renewable energy and low carbon communities, and help Canada seize our unique opportunity to set a positive example for other industrialized countries and pave the way for developing countries.

 

By Huda Al-Saedy - halsaedy@ecojustice.ca

Ecojustice 

Women Leaders in 1901

How fitting it was a few days ago, to celebrate the dear neighbor, our friends, the Ursuline Community in Chatham Ontario.  In 1901, 117 yrs ago, their Leadership of the day, answered a request to take on a new direction, more responsibilities in a new territory.  For some it meant leaving everything behind.  It meant moving to the bilingual parish of St Anne in Tecumseh Ontario, and there to teach children.  They arrived with very little, but brought ample faith, their talents, generosity, commitment to prayer and a longing to help those in need.  Over all those years I believe they did much more for the church than educate.  They above all, reflected God’s love and grace poured forth in them and passed on hope, peace and joy to others.

To celebrate this milestone, a liturgy of thanksgiving and social followed, radiating joy as did the networking and conversations.  The spirit of those dedicated women religious women of long ago, rooted in the spirituality of Angela Merici, lives on.  It continues to impact the lives of countless families raised in that parish over the years.

As I soaked in the gratitude and celebration in the room, the words, “Well done good and faithful servant,” “come to me all you who are weary,” came to mind.  The painting to the left, entitled Behold, symbolizes the God of all creation, the Risen Christ, shouting out to all those who have ears to hear, “Behold, see what I have done for you.”  “I am with you at all times”, “Listen to me,” even now this day, in the chaos and stressors of your life, in our world, in our Universe, “I am with you”.  Allelulia Allelulia.  

- Sister Patricia St. Louis, csj