Guest Bloggers

I Saw a Cross Upon a Hill : A Donkey's Tale

Are you enamoured by my cousins, Eeyore, that loveable donkey from the tales of Winnie the Pooh or is your style more a moviegoer’s favourite, tough guy, Donkey, Shrek’s talkative sidekick?  Do you sometimes find yourself humming that delightful Donkey Serenade, keeping company with a mule?  Such light hearted fun; but let’s put aside talk of my fictitious cousins.  Since truth is often stranger than fiction, let me tell you a little about myself, my humble self whom Chesterton once described in his humourous little poem as one:

With monstrous head and sickening cry,
And ears like errant wings,
The devil’s walking parody
Of all four-footed things.

But let me back track a little. About thirty three years ago, as legend has it, a humble little burro was chosen to carry pregnant Mary to Bethlehem to give birth to her Child. Did this not foreshadow the day I would be chosen to carry her Son into Jerusalem?  I will never forget that day! How could I forget our humble God enthroned upon my back?  I carried him that day, cautiously weaving through the cheering crowds, when all at once ‘There was a shout about my ears, and palms before my feet.’

His mission almost finished, I heard him warn his disciples that He would soon be put to death. Put to death, how could that be?  Surely, I had gotten it all wrong! 

I’m just a donkey, just the ‘devil’s walking-parody on all four footed things.’  Perhaps that’s all you think I am. However, when a distant rumble, ‘Crucify him’, pierced my ears, I stood and shuddered.   In the distance I saw a cross upon a hill and wished I could have carried it for him. 

No ludicrous buffoon am I.  No donkey ever was. You see, because I carried the King, donkeys, generations after me, bear a cross upon their backs.  May you, my friend, I beg you, think twice before you call someone an ass – for she or he, too, bears the divine.

Guest blogger Sr. Magdalena Vogt, Missionary Sisters of the Precious Blood

                The Donkey

When fishes flew and forests walked,
And figs grew upon thorn,
Some moment when the moon was blood,
Then surely I was born.

With monstrous head and sickening cry,
And ears like errant wings,
The devil’s walking parody
Of all four-footed things.

The tattered outlaw of the earth,
Of ancient, crooked will;
Starve, scourge, deride me: I am dumb,
I keep my secret still.

Fools! For I also had my hour;
One far fierce hour and sweet:
There was a shout about my ears,
And palms before my feet.

         C. K. Chesterton


International Women’s Day

Monday, March 7th is International Women’s Day, celebrating the progress of women. Over the last year we have seen continued growth in our world towards greater equality, justice, and meaning for the lives of female identified people. Women and girls are courageously claiming their space and becoming a visible presence in the public domain. Through their social, economic, cultural and political achievements they are boldly demonstrating a collective response to ending poverty and violence. Award winning journalist Sally Armstrong in her book, Ascent of Women, compellingly tells their empowering stories of making change happen.

The 2016 theme for International Women’s Day is Planet 50-50 by 2030: Step It Up for Gender Equality. We do indeed need to step up as a global community to strengthen commitments on gender equality, women’s empowerment and women’s human rights.  We must re-commit daily to end violence against women in all its forms.

Even in adversity there is cause to celebrate. We are made aware of this in Canada, as we witness the struggles of Indigenous Women throughout their lands. In their daily lives, these women encounter multiple layers of violence that continue to threaten their existence, well-being and spirituality.  While facing such dramatic challenges they continue to emphasize the importance of action, community and care of Earth as a process of healing.

Indigenous women’s leadership is informing us that gender equality is a compass to how we share our world.  They are tackling issues of identity, culture, empowerment and opportunity through land defense, risking their liberties to stop the environmental impact of pipeline construction and shale gas mining. Raising their voices, they are demanding both human justice and equality and eco-justice for the land. They are reminding us that the struggles of women are indivisible from the destruction of planetary eco-systems. To reverence one is to love the other. They are sharing the wisdom that their healing – the healing of the global community- is intrinsically connected to the healing of our wounded Earth.

On this International Women’s Day, together let us set our intention to end violence against women. Let us raise up the many courageous women who are beacons of hope to us all and who reflect so clearly our interconnectedness with all creation. 

Guest blogger,    Janet Speth, Sister of St. Joseph of Toronto

Find out more about the new commitments under the UN Women’s Step It Up Initiative

http://www.unwomen.org/en/get-involved/step-it-up

 

  

 

We All Need a Little Manure

During the Lenten readings, Jesus challenges us with the well-known Parable of the Barren Fig Tree: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came seeking fruit on it and found none. And he said to the vinedresser, ‘Look, for three years now I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and I find none. Cut it down. Why should it use up the ground?’ And he answered him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also, until I dig around it and put on manure. Then if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’” Luke 13:6-9

You and I are the ‘fig trees’ in God’s vineyard. Are we bearing abundant fruit? Or are we barren? At the outset of Lent, we were invited to practice some serious mercy-ing. Two weeks into this Lenten season, I am struggling along. If you are anything like me, you possibly also struggled somewhere along the way. In the parable I see the gardener fervently, (perhaps foolishly) digging, digging, digging around that tree. And then he beckons to me, and hands me a spade.

Spade in hand, let us ‘dig the word’ which Jesus presents to us in this parable. I don’t own a fig tree, but remember well the fig tree laden with luscious fruit, under which I played as a young child. However, now I am an avid lover of African violets. Both they and fig trees flourish when the soil is well aerated and given manure. How do we, God’s fig trees, assure that we flourish and bear abundant fruit? Our ever patient God daily nourishes our lives with mercy, which contributes to the fertility of the soil we need to bear fruit. All we need to do is dig diligently around our roots to prepare the soil for God’s enriching mercy, often bestowed on us through the kind actions of others, so we can bear abundant fruit. Enough fruit to generously share morsels of mercy with all who daily cross our path.

"A good tree doesn't produce bad fruit; on the other hand, a bad tree doesn't produce good fruit. For each tree is known by its own fruit.” Lk 6: 43-45

Guest Blogger: Sr. Magdelena Vogt, CPS

 

Paying It Forward

This is Sunitha Gabbeta showing affection to an orphan. Sunitha lives in Garnepalli, a remote village in south-east India. She is illiterate and earns less than a 1$/day. She has two children.

She is a member of SOPAR’s Women Development Program in India– a program that emphasizes the formation of self-help groups in order to bring rural, poor and marginalized Indian women together, build their capacities and encourage their active participation in different activities geared towards empowerment and community development. 

Becoming a Women Program member changed Sunitha’s life. Before joining the program, she lived a secluded life, was shy and felt uneasy to come out of her home. With the help of SOPAR and with time, she has developed self-confidence, gained knowledge and improved her family’s economic conditions but that is not all…

Sunitha never thought of helping others. She talks to us about her new life:

“I have just enough money to feed my children but I know that some others in my village have harder situations than me. I want to help them. I want to support abandoned orphans and neglected old age people. I can’t give them much but I can show them affection and from time to time, give them a meal. Every year, I forego my daily wage to participate in the collective birthday celebrations of orphans organized by SOPAR and to listen to the orphans talk about their joys and sorrows. I also donate a small amount to help with their education. SOPAR made me understand that I too can help others even though I am poor. I know now it is the right thing to do. I explain all these things to my children and encourage them to help others. By helping others, I feel I am helping myself.”      

SOPAR’s trainings include talks on basic human values and get women to think of others in need. The trainings bring true attitude change: these rural poor uneducated women become partners in bettering their community and many become donors to support those who are less privileged than themselves. SOPAR’s work transforms beneficiaries into partners, and ultimately into donors:  last year 48 260 poor rural women members contributed an impressive $95 000 towards orphan education!

Sunitha’s actions are a strong example of the gift of self and force us to recognize that we can all do a little something to make a difference in other people’s lives.

Let’s ask ourselves the following question: what gesture or action can we do today to positively change the world around us?

200 000 women like Sunitha participate in our Women Program, a program supported by the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada and many other Canadians donors.

Janice Aubry, Program Officer

A Different Kind of Human Rights Day

December 10, 2015 certainly was a different kind of Human Rights Day for those of us working to advance human rights protection in and from Canada. Political change has truly opened up some real possibilities and opportunities for reversing troubling setbacks and advancing long-needed reforms with respect to Canada’s foreign policy and domestic record on the human rights front. First time we’ve been able to say that in quite some time.

As such, the annual review (the 14th edition) we always publish on Human Rights Day, our Human Rights Agenda for Canada, is the most ambitious and comprehensive yet.  We’ve endeavoured to put a wide-ranging vision and set of recommendations in front of the new government.

#Rights4All  #pourtous There is much for us to do together over the coming year to hold the government to encouraging commitments already made, highlight areas where we need to hear and see more, and watch carefully to ensure that the promise of new tone and new approaches becomes reality.  We look forward to continuing to work with you in those shared efforts.

Guest blogger, Alex Neve, Secretary General of Amnesty International Canada   www.amnesty.ca/

Links to the press release and full report:

http://www.amnesty.ca/news/defending-rights-all-amnesty-international%E2%80%99s-human-rights-agenda-new-canadian-government-0