Caritas
Intl on Mideast crisis: aid to victims, not militants
(Vatican Radio) Caritas Internationalis, the
confederation of Catholic aid and development agencies wrapped up a high level
meeting in Rome Wednesday discussing how to best respond to the humanitarian
crises enveloping the Middle East. The September 15-17 meeting brought
together directors of country and regional Caritas offices in the nations most
immediately affected by the conflicts: Syria, Iraq, the Holy Land, Lebanon,
Jordan and Turkey, but also those of most other agencies in the global Caritas
family.
Caritas Internationalis Secretary General Michel
Roy says it is “rare” that they all can make meetings such as this week’s in
Rome, “so it shows the concern of all” about what is happening in the Middle
East.
Listen to Tracey McClure's interview with Michel
Roy:
Humanitarian tragedy unfolding
The meeting took place before a grim
backdrop. More than 13 million Syrians are in need of aid inside and
outside of the country; this summer’s conflict in Gaza has left hundreds of
thousands of people homeless and in need of healthcare, food, water and social
services. Despite a ceasefire that appears to be holding, no long term
plan has been hammered out to end the cycle of Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. The resumption of violence in Iraq has forced over one million
people from their homes.
“We know that this violence will not come to
an end soon; we don’t know how it is going to evolve,” observes Roy.
“Before the summer, nobody would have thought that Iraq would be in the state
where it is now so there are plenty of things possible in that region that we
don’t really know about.”
Programs, Funding, Advocacy, Communications
Delegates to the Caritas Internationalis meeting
identified at least 3-4 areas in which partner agencies need to focus in
the mid and long term: reinforcing aid and development programs and
seeking more funding; advocacy, and improving interagency communication.
Besides their ongoing development programs,
Caritas member organizations offer first emergency response for victims of the
conflicts, explains Roy, but to do this, it takes money, and there’s not much
being offered. “We have to fundraise and the U.N. itself collects not
even half, perhaps not even a third, of what is needed in the region so their
programs are at stake. And when we say a program is at stake, it’s
peoples’ lives that are at stake.”
“Caritas organisations are overwhelmed as needs
grow and resources shrink. This is far beyond our capacity and anyone
else’s. A major move has to take place as we cannot accept that millions
of people, whole societies, that used to live together in peace, are
destroyed.”
International focus on weapons, not victims
“The international community is focusing
more on helping the rebels or helping this group or that group with arms, which
have a very high cost, and not giving to help the victims of the wars that
they’ve been supporting and sometimes fueling as well. So there is
something paradoxical there that we want to work upon,” says Roy.
“We are working on our response mechanisms and how
to provide more and better service, providing trauma counselling besides food,
shelter and clothing. “Their souls also need to be accompanied.
People have to be taken care of holistically.”
Advocacy to end wars
One of the main issues raised at the Rome
conference was the need for “advocacy so that these wars come to an end,” says
Roy. “It’s a huge challenge, maybe a new topic even but we are going to
take it up still at our own level – not alone of course – we’ve spoken of
a lot of interreligious initiatives, of ecumenical initiatives, so we are going
to see how we go forward on those but bringing together all the believers,
believers in God and…because they believe in God, they believe that there is a
peaceful solution to be found that brings people together and not to oppose
people and confront people all the time.”
Advocacy with an “interreligious approach,” Roy
suggests, will involve engaging Muslims, many of whom “do not support the
violence so there is a strong basis in Syria, in Iraq for sure – in Palestine
it’s a little bit of a different issue- but there is a strong basis to think
anew and to think ahead so we have to engage.”
Caritas Internationalis partners also agreed on
the need to come together more frequently to improve “synergy” and their
communication strategy as a whole.
“This togetherness is very important, and the fact
that we are all present - all actors in the Caritas family present (at this
Rome meeting) - is a sign that we want to do it, and if we want to do it, we
will do it.”
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