08.26.08
Refugee Supporters To Be Thanked
Posted in Refugees, Social Teachings, community, faith, justice tagged advocacy, Refugee at 11:51 am by cjpcbrisbane
Catholic parishioners from around the Archdiocese who have helped refugees over the past six years will be thanked at a special celebration on Thursday 28 August.
The celebration, co-hosted by the Archdiocesan Justice and Peace Commission and the Centre for Multicultural Pastoral Care, will be held at the Centre’s offices at 333 Given Terrace, Paddington, from 7.00 p.m.
The Commission’s Executive Officer, Peter Arndt, said that many Catholics responded to the Commission’s numerous appeals for help to convince successive Immigration Ministers to provide protection for a number of asylum seekers since 2002.
“We started in Advent in 2002 with a petition for compassionate treatment for Zahra Alawi and her family,” Mr Arndt said.
“Many Catholics from around the Archdiocese signed the petition and their support was instrumental in convincing Senator Amanda Vanstone to give protection to this family,” he said.
“Many Catholics also responded to our appeals for letters of support for a number of the Afghan boys who played with the Tigers Eleven Soccer Club,” he said.
“They also wrote letters of support for an Ethiopian woman, Kibre Kebede, who faced deportation in 2005,” he said.
“All of these refugees are safe from the persecution and violence they faced in their homeland because, in part, Catholics in Brisbane made the effort to support them,” he said.
“All of the people we supported are Australian citizens and are very grateful to the support they received from many good people in Brisbane,” he said.
“Some of them have agreed to come to our celebration and to talk about what has happened to them in the last few years,” he said.
“We encourage people who signed petitions, wrote letters of support and helped in other ways to come along and meet some of the people they helped,” he said.
Mr Arndt said that the celebration would also be an opportunity to explain what improvements are still needed in Australia’s refugee policy.
“We hope that Catholics will continue to respond to the Gospel’s call to welcome the stranger,” he said.
“The fundamental message we want to get across to Catholics is that defending and promoting the dignity of our fellow human beings is at the heart of the Gospel,” he said.
Those intending to attend are encouraged to RSVP to Alana on (07) 3336 9351 or emericka@bne.catholic.net.au
For further information, please contact Peter Arndt on (07) 3336 9173 or 0409 265 476. NB This release is issued with the approval of the Commission or its Executive under the provision of its Charter which enables it to speak in its own right. The views expressed in it do not necessarily represent the views of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Brisbane.
08.04.08
Commission Appeals for Life of Bali Bombers
Posted in Global Citizens, Politics, Social Teachings, community, faith, justice tagged catholic social teachings, compassion, Death Penalty, human rights, justice, respect at 1:27 pm by cjpcbrisbane
Friday 1 August 2008
Brisbane’s Catholic Justice and Peace Commission has appealed for the lives of the Bali Bombers who may soon be executed.
The Commission’s Executive Officer, Peter Arndt, said that this action was consistent with the Commission’s commitment to the Church’s Teaching on the death penalty.
Mr Arndt said that this appeal should in no way be seen as minimising the seriousness of the violence perpetrated by the bombers or the enormous personal pain and loss their actions have caused.
“We condemn the actions of the bombers as a gross violation of the dignity and rights of the victims of the bombing of nightclubs in Bali in 2002,” Mr Arndt said.
“Those who have lost family members and who live with injury and disability because of the bombings are entitled to on-going Government and community compassion and support in their efforts to deal with their loss and suffering,” he said.
“Those responsible for this crime deserve the most serious penalty, but this should fall short of the death penalty,” he said.
“The Commission has campaigned for the universal abolition of the death penalty around the world over the course of this year and we must take this action as a matter of principle,” he said.
“Capital punishment should not be used as revenge or retribution or as a deterrent,” he said.
“We must be consistent in our defence of human life, even in the case of people who are responsible for the most appalling actions,” he said.
“Both the Old and New Testaments guide us in this conviction,” he said.
“God ensured that Cain was punished severely for killing Abel, but God also protected him from any attempt to kill him in retribution,” he said.
“In John’s Gospel, Jesus stopped the execution of the woman caught in adultery by demanding that those who were without sin cast the first stone,” he said.
“We will write to the Indonesian Ambassador to Australia and ask him to convey our appeal for the lives of the Bali Bombers to the Indonesian Government,” he said.
“We also ask Catholics to continue to send messages to their local MP, Senators, the Prime Minister and Government Ministers asking them to work for universal abolition of the death penalty,” he said.
“We also ask that Catholics continue to pray for the victims of crime and acts of terror, for those on death row and for their families,” he said.
The Commission’s petition asking for Government action on the issue will be lodged in the Senate at the end of August and further public action will accompany that event.
For further information, please contact Peter Arndt on (07) 3336 9173 or 0409 265 476.
NB This release is issued with the approval of the Commission or its Executive under the provision of its Charter which enables it to speak in its own right. The views expressed in it do not necessarily represent the views of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Brisbane.
