Jim Claffey, NGO representative of the CM to the UN, writes about the United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and how they relate to the Vincentians’ work around the world. In this piece, he takes a break from that series to discuss a recent conference on refugees.

Conferences come in different styles and flavors. Some, although informative and helpful, can be very dry. Some are unremarkable and quickly forgotten. Others inspire and lead naturally to shared action commitments.

Such was the Famvin Homeless Alliance (FHA) Refugee Conference. Seventy FamVin members gathered in Seville this month to discuss how to accompany refugees and Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) as part of FHA’s commitment to respond creatively to the needs of homeless persons (including street sleepers and slum dwellers). Another 90-100 people joined online in spite of the time differences around the world.

In this article I would like to share some highlights of the conference by focusing on several of the comments that most impacted participants.

Heritage-Heroes-Hopes

Fr. Bob Maloney’s keynote spoke beautifully of the Vincentian heritage of accompanying displaced persons, described the contributions of largely unknown collaborators of St. Vincent, and called the Family to continue that tradition today with creative imagination.

Other keynote addresses reminded us that “welcoming the stranger” is an ancient religious value, and shared current statistics and document references.

How to Preach Good News to Those in Deep Sorrow Who have Lost Everything?

This question brought complete silence to the room. Fr. Vitaly Novak C.M., of the Ukraine, spoke eloquently of the suffering of his people. There was no easy answer. But one idea clearly emerged, a central insight of the entire conference:

Keep the Individual Central

Let’s not get lost in numbers. Focus on the real people who seek refuge, individuals much like us, who need some light in their darkness. Know them, listen to them, learn from them, and let them tell us what they need and what we can do. Include them, and respect their human dignity. “Nothing about refugees without refugees.”

What Can I and We Do?

This variant of the Vincentian Question, “What must be done,” emerged again and again. We want to follow Vincent’s words: “Say little, do much.”

“I have been there”

A victim of human trafficking held the room spellbound sharing her story–a valiant woman who has survived—with the help of Daughters of Charity—and is building a new life. Then a refugee drama also helped keep it all real with a moving portrayal—in silence–of the dangers and disasters typically faced by those forced to flee into the unknown.

Sacred Ground

Pope Francis’s mantra of Welcome-Protect-Promote-Integrate guided conference thinking about responding to the needs of displaced persons in areas served by our Family. We were reminded that when we accompany refugees, we walk on sacred ground and we do not impose our worldview, nor our solutions. We do not “assimilate” them; we integrate them, knowing that they enrich receiving communities and all of us with their dreams and talents.

FHA updated us on the remarkable success of the 13 Houses Campaign: 8,187 persons served in 55 countries through 84 projects. And for the coming year, the project will focus on the plight of refugees, people trafficked, and internally diplaced persons.

Seven Commitments

In his closing remarks, Mark McGreevy, FHA’s leader, announced seven concrete actions, steps the Alliance will carry out in the next year with the hope that the Family will do all in its power to collaborate with this ambitious program.

I’m not listing the seven steps here. I’m challenging readers to discover them. We need to improve communication in the Family, so I hope we all follow FHA’s information streams:

www.vfhomelessalliance.org;

Twitter: @famvinalliance;

FB: @vfhomelessalliance

IN: famvin-homeless-alliance

Email: fha.info@famvin.org