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From Independent Catholic News, July 23rd, 2018
Written by Ellen Teague

"Justice is not high enough up the political agenda" a Catholic Labour MP told the annual gathering of the National Justice and Peace Network of England and Wales at the weekend. John Grogan of the Keighley Constituency in Yorkshire singled out benefit sanctions as a key area for advocacy work. He praised his local SVP for supporting disabled and vulnerable people suffering because of the cutting or withholding of benefits, and urged his audience of around 200 J&P activists to stay engaged with poverty issues and "don't give up on democracy".
 
The 40th conference of the National Justice and Peace Network (NJPN) in Derbyshire took the theme, 'In the shelter of each other the people live' and explored building a Church and a society with the most vulnerable at its heart. As well as J&P representatives from around England and Wales, also there were J&P Scotland and Missionary groups - such as the Columbans, Mill Hill Missionaries and Assumption Sisters.
 
John Grogan's session was chaired by Fr Colum Kelly of Apostleship of the Sea who ministers to seafarers at the port of Immingham and officiated at the conference Mass. He lives at the docks and feels that, "if we are to minister to those in need we need to go to where the hurt is". Many seafarers are away from home for nine months or 12 months at a time. "A lot of what we do for the seafarers are small gestures - by coming on to the ship or giving them some phone cards, Sim cards, or something that can give them wi-fi access," said Fr Colum. He hoped the Church will fully embrace the inspiration of Pope Francis and his call for the Church to be a "field hospital", outgoing and responsive to the needy.
 
Sally Ruane's workshop on 'The Importance of Public Services' highlighted the lack of Church political action on saving the National Health Service and on controversial social security reform. The longstanding NHS campaigner from a Leicester parish felt the Church should challenge "the transfer of resources away from poor people" and that "we musn't go back to a hotchpotch of healthcare". Church leaders should be more attuned to the impact of austerity measures, she said, but laity too should "take more social responsibility".
 
Other keynote speakers also highlighted to plight of vulnerable groups in Britain today. Sarah Teather of the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) spoke of asylum seekers getting more destitute in a UK asylum system that is "profoundly flawed" and marked by "deliberate cruelty". JRS has seen the criminalisation of those seeking work and reduced access to legal aid, but she said that "amidst the uncertainty they have the certainty that we are with them". JRS accompaniment includes giving money for bus passes, hot meals, visiting people in detention, and the friendship of simply listening to people's stories, something Cardinal Vincent Nichols had done the previous week at a JRS Centre.
 
Theologian David McLoughlin of Newman College in Birmingham called for the Church to see its mission as tackling injustice and endorsed the inspirational leadership of Pope Francis in calling for "a poor Church committed to the poor". Rev Al Barrett, a Church of England Vicar in a Birmingham parish, spoke energetically about being transformed by community-building and empowerment work in a poor area. He works to shift the language from stories of deficits and lacks to stories about unearthing and connecting the diverse and abundant gifts of the neighbourhood. He called for justice rather than charity, and said he admired Brazilian bishop Dom Helder Camara who spoke of this in his Latin American context.
 
The opening hymn in Friday's liturgy was the Marty Haugen hymn with the first line, "Let us build a house where love can dwell and all can safely live", encompassing the vision of the conference. At the concluding liturgy young people handed out pebbles to participants, urging them to make ripples and build God's kingdom back in their dioceses.
 
During the conference, an NJPN 40th anniversary oak tree was planted in the conference grounds.