World Refugee Day 2023
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This is the blog of the Commission on Peace and Justice for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, New York.
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Labels: Catholic Relief Services, Title 42
Catholic Relief Services Chapters and Clubs are communities of people who are working to transform the world. Each year, thousands of people participate in CRS campaigns to eradicate global poverty and injustice.
These advocates also engage their communities in advocacy and community giving to make a difference. As CRS notes, “The world’s problems are big and complex, but when we come together in faith and action our impact knows no bounds.”
Next week, CRS is offering people an opportunity to learn how they can join a CRS Chapter or Club. It is just one way to support our sisters and brothers around the world who are experiencing hunger, poverty, and other vulnerabilities. On either Tuesday, April 26, or Wednesday, April 27, you can see what CRS Chapters and Clubs are and how you can make a difference.
Here is the link to register for either one of the two, hour-long sessions:
Labels: advocacy, Catholic Relief Services
Through reflection on first-person narratives of a range of women involved in leadership positions in Catholic ministries (social justice, LCWR and religious congregations, educational, media, diocesan, NGOs, etc.), Rising examines the range of leadership roles that women play in the Catholic Church, explores the particular challenge that women face, as well their distinctive styles of leadership, while also pointing toward an expanded understanding of ministry and leadership in the church.
Labels: Carolyn Y. Woo, Catholic Relief Services, Orbis Books, Robert Ellsberg, University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business
Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Albany has a website devoted to providing information about the Syrian refugees and the European migrant crisis. They explain that the situation is not new.
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Labels: Catholic Relief Services, Catholics Confront Global Poverty, Laudato Si, USCCB, World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation
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Bishop Richard E. Pates, Chair of the Committee on International Justice and Peace of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and Dr. Carolyn Y. Woo, President of Catholic Relief Services, have written to members of Congress, urging support of an immediate ceasefire and humanitarian relief for Gaza as well as for support of a just and lasting peace.
. . . the Justice and Peace Commission of the Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries in the Holy Land has declared that all of these killings “are products of the injustice and of the hatred that the occupation fosters in the hearts of those prone to such deeds. These deaths are in no way justifiable and we mourn with those who mourn the waste of these young lives.” The status quo leads to deep desperation in Gaza and the West Bank, and to poverty where there should be economic opportunity. Furthermore, are excessive actions of hostility and indiscriminate punishment not breeding a whole new generation of terrorists?
Catholic Relief Services has had to suspend operations in Gaza due to the violence, but with U.S. support, is prepared to resume humanitarian and development assistance to Gaza’s vulnerable population when a ceasefire is achieved. Such assistance reduces desperation and is good for both Palestinians and Israelis alike.
We urge Congress to support an immediate ceasefire and humanitarian relief for Gaza. In addition, Congress should support the difficult, but essential, work of building a just and lasting peace. Only the establishment of a viable and independent Palestinian state in the near term living alongside a recognized and secure Israel will bring the peace for which majorities of both Israelis and Palestinians yearn.
It is our hope and prayer that one day we might look back and find that this recent cycle of violence was the last — a cycle broken by a just and lasting peace agreement. Together with Pope Francis, let us agree “not to spare prayer or any effort to end every hostility and seek the desired peace for the good of all.” Let our refrain be that of Pope Francis: “Dialogue, dialogue, dialogue.”You can read the entire letter here.
Labels: Catholic Relief Services, Gaza, USCCB
Deacon Walter Ayres, director of the Commission on Peace and Justice, reflected on the Gospel and immigration reform in his homily for July 13, the 15th Sunday of Ordinary time:
Labels: Catholic Relief Services, immigration reform, Pope Francis, USCCB
Bishop Richard E. Pates, Chairman of the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on International Justice and Peace, and Dr. Carolyn Woo, President and CEO of Catholic Relief Services, recently wrote to Congress to urge appropriate funding of the poverty-focused and humanitarian accounts in the fiscal year 2015 appropriations. From their letter:
Based on advice from our partners and CRS staff on the ground, we are deeply concerned about humanitarian funding. International Disaster Assistance, Migration and Refugee Assistance, and Food for Peace must be able to respond not only to the crises of today but also their potential escalation. And of course, should another major natural disaster occur or conflict erupt, some contingency funding is necessary. We urge that these accounts be funded at least at the levels of fiscal year 2014.
We fully support the Administration’s request to increase funding for peacekeeping; $300 million of that would fund the nascent force in Mali. The proposed Peacekeeping Response Mechanism is a creative response to ensure flexibility should crises escalate, such as the violence in the Central African Republic and South Sudan. We support this proposal. Peacekeeping operations not only help to contain violence, but also enable organizations like CRS to provide humanitarian assistance.You can read more here.
Labels: Catholic Relief Services, Congress, international aid
Catholic News Service has a blog posting on the situation in Haiti, now more than two years after it was struck by a powerful earthquake:
. . . More than 316,000 people died; an estimated 500,000 people — a third of the original 1.5 million people left homeless — remain in tattered shelters in hundreds of settlements in and around the capital of Port-au-Prince.
While a sizable amount of rubble from collapsed buildings has been removed, the capital still bears signs of the destruction with structures askew and little reconstruction in place. The collapsed National Palace, which housed the offices of the president, still sits silently across from Champs de Mars Park, where 20,000 people remain camped. The scene serves as a stark reminder of the perilous struggle Haiti faces.
Aid workers and other observers find any progress distressingly slow. About $2.4 billion of the $4.5 billion pledged by the world’s governments meeting in New York two months after the quake has been received, the United Nations Office of the Special Envoy to Haiti reported. Even less actually has been spent.
- Built 10,600 transitional shelters
- Provided 10 million meals to more than 1 million people
- Organized medical teams that performed more than 1,000 emergency surgeries and conducted 71,000 outpatient consultations
- Helped workers crush enough rubble to fill almost 1,800 dump trucks
- Hired more than 12,000 people in temporary cash-for-work programs
Labels: Catholic Relief Services, Haiti
Catholic Relief Services reports:
A cholera outbreak in central Haiti has left 250 people dead and more than 3,000 ill. Haitian president Rene Preval confirmed the outbreak on Friday, October 22, after first reports of the illness and deaths were made in St. Marc in the southern Artibonite department, the center of the Cholera spate about 60-miles northwest of Port-au-Prince.You can learn more here.
Health officials now fear the spread of the disease to the camps of Port-au-Prince, where more than one million displaced people still live. Poor sanitation and hygiene in the settlements make people there particularly vulnerable to the disease, which causes diarrhea and vomiting so severe that it can kill a person within hours. The Associated Press stated that five cholera patients have been reported in Haiti’s capital, but government officials said Sunday that all five apparently contracted cholera outside Port-au-Prince.
Catholic Relief Services mobilized a massive response just 1 day after the cholera outbreak was confirmed. CRS and partner staff went tent to tent in 12 camps in Port-au-Prince, distributing three bars of soap each to more than 10,000 families (more than 50,000 people) and reaching as many people through an information campaign (simple flyers in Creole) that promotes hand washing and personal hygiene.
CRS’ health team, with colleagues from the University of Maryland, has also been working to help 7 CRS supported hospitals around the country prepare to respond to a possible influx of cholera patients.
Labels: Catholic Relief Services, Haiti
Operation Rice Bowl (ORB) is the official Lenten program of Catholic Relief Services, and calls Catholics in the United States to reach out in solidarity with the poor around the world through the traditional Lenten practices of prayer, fasting, learning, and giving. By participating in these four activities, we come to understand our call to be a part of one global community. This is from the latest ORB e-mail. By coincidence, it involves Albany.
As we enter Holy Week we are reminded of the needs near at hand as we visit a couple in the Diocese of Albany, New York, whose status changed from care givers to the recipients of care in the matter of a few years. In Albany County, which is part of the diocese, 12,205 people have disabilities about 6.5 percent of the population according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Of this number, more than half are unemployed though they are of working age, 16 to 65.
Pray
Palm Sunday is filled with ironic acts. We walk into church waving palm leaves to enact a moment when Jesus entered Jerusalem to the shouts of Hosanna. Then we tell the story of his torture and execution. We look down the path of Holy Week, knowing that we must walk with Jesus through the agony of Good Friday and wait beside the tomb on Holy Saturday. Yet in the middle of the story, even as Jesus himself anticipates his end, we celebrate with him a victory meal: the last supper of his life, the first of our lives as disciples. Each time you celebrate Eucharist this week, prayerfully call to mind all who still hunger for Easter hope, who long for something new, who daily walk to a cross erected by injustice. As you walk with Christ, walk with them. As you enter the Easter celebration, ask God to empower you to work even more stridently for justice near at hand and far from home
Fast
This is our week of fasting, of putting regular tasks and obligations aside to immerse ourselves in Jesus' walk to the cross. We will recount the story of long waiting. We will light candles, experience darkness, wash feet and walk in silence. On Friday, we will go without our Eucharistic celebration. We will be hungry. With busy schedules and family obligations, with Easter responsibilities looming, it can be hard to find the time to attend all the Holy Week liturgies. As part of your fast this week, resist the temptation to fill the time with other things. Spend part of each day in vigil with the suffering Christ and those he came to save.
Learn
In 1998, Michael and Gail Chase were caregivers. They owned a day care center and were foster parents. But that changed when an illness caused Michael to lose the use of his legs. Then Gail became disabled under the strain of Michael's care. Suddenly they were among those who must rely on the care of others. They moved to Albany, NY, where there were more services for people with disabilities, and they found care in the form of the St. John's-St. Anne's Center. An outreach of St. John's-St. Anne's Catholic Church, the center provides food, furniture, outreach, referrals, and holiday and summer programs for neighborhoods in Albany's South End. Through the center the Chases received monthly food deliveries and located a wheelchair-accessible home in a safe neighborhood. The center's staff also guided them to a local program that provided part-time work and a college education. Now Michael is working to finish the degree he began in the late1990s and Gail plans to begin a degree program in liberal arts.
Give
For the last six weeks you have been urged to collect money in your cardboard Rice Bowl as a Lenten act of almsgiving. Seventy-five percent of the money collected through this Lenten Program goes to support CRS sponsored hunger programs worldwide. Twenty-five percent will stay in your diocese to fight hunger there. During Holy Week consider dropping a dollar a day into your Rice Bowl.