Canada's Catholic development aid organization had to put on hold its
traditional fall education campaign after some bishops criticized the
planned campaign as too political.
In early October, volunteers and staff of the Canadian Catholic
Organization for Development and Peace were scrambling to develop a
campaign with less political material that would gain the backing of all
of Canada's bishops.
On Sept. 5, Archbishop Richard Smith of Edmonton, president of the
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, and the conference general
secretary Msgr. Pat Powers informed Development and Peace that several
bishops objected to the fall campaign and did not want the material
distributed in their dioceses.
It is the first time in the 45-year history of the Catholic
development agency that an education campaign has been altered in this
way.
Media reports saying the bishops intervened, blocked or stopped the
fall program are inaccurate, Smith told Canadian Catholic News Oct. 1.
For the fall campaign, Development and Peace, which is similar to the
U.S. church's Catholic Relief Services, departed from its plan of
focusing on environmental themes to raise questions about Canada's
international aid policies, following substantial reductions in
government grants to the agency over the next five years.
"Some of the material was becoming a little more direct political
lobbying than we're accustomed to," Smith said. Some bishops, Smith
included, expressed concern the materials might cause divisiveness in
parishes and among donors.
The bishops must ensure "whatever's done fosters the unity of the church and is in no way divisive," he said.
Smith said he spoke to the leadership of Development and Peace about
the concerns, which they received graciously, openly and with a
"readiness to understand." The agency's leadership agreed to "adjust
their literature to reflect [the bishops'] concerns."
The original campaign included the distribution of postcards, which
had already been printed. Parishioners throughout Canada would have been
encouraged to send the pre-addressed postcards to Prime Minister
Stephen Harper.
A copy of a postcard was obtained by the Toronto-based Catholic Register.
It asks Harper to "launch a national consultation on the future of
Canadian development assistance."
The card also urges a "Special
Parliamentary Committee to examine the new direction of Canadian
assistance."
"The trend in how Canada's foreign aid programs are administered has
changed quite dramatically," Development and Peace executive director
Michael Casey told The Catholic Register.
"The role for civil
society organizations like us is becoming less apparent. More of the
money is going to multilateral institutions, private sector development.
... We wanted to see if a constructive critique of this policy from our
perspective could get a hearing."
The campaign did not mention the $35 million in Canadian currency cut
over five years in government international aid funding to the Catholic
agency, Casey said, and is not an attempt to revisit the funding
decision.
Neither the bishops' conference nor Development and Peace could say
how many bishops objected to campaign materials.
Bishops on the
conference's Standing Committee on Development and Peace said they were
not consulted on the move to halt the campaign and have not seen the
materials.
"I haven't had it explained to me, so I can't really comment,"
Toronto's Bishop John Boissonneau, chair of the committee, said in late
September. "I was aware that the president of the conference sent out a
letter, but there's been no follow-up with me directly."
"I kind of feel out in the cold on this," said committee member Bishop Richard Grecco of Charlottetown.
The last time the bishops' committee met was May 31 for a
consultation with the Development and Peace Liaison Committee for
relations with the bishops.
Meanwhile, work on the fall education
campaign had been delayed until June while the organization dealt with
major restructuring to accommodate a drastic cut in Canadian
International Development Agency funding.
Ronald Breau, Development and Peace national council president, wrote
to the organization's membership Sept. 17 to explain the change in plans.
"We are fully aware that our decision will disappoint many of our active and engaged members."
"Concerns were expressed regarding the nature and methodology of the
campaign with respect that it could create some divisiveness within the
Church community and that perhaps there should be some more
consultations within D&P and also with the broader Church," Breau
said.
"The bishops are concerned that ongoing dialogue between the Catholic
Church and the Government of Canada on some important, timely and
sensitive issues might be compromised by our approach at this time."
Parish Development and Peace leader Greg Kennedy is left wondering
what his group will do while it waits for the campaign to launch.
"Traditionally, Development and Peace at the parish level operates
basically two times a year -- one in the fall with the education
campaign and then the Share Lent or ShareLife in [the Toronto
archdiocese]," said the Jesuit seminarian, who is studying for the
priesthood and helping out at Our Lady of Lourdes in downtown Toronto.
"Without those bookends, really there's not much to do until Lent."
The appearance that the bishops are divided or opposed to Development
and Peace has become a challenge for parish groups, Kennedy said. And
the idea that the bishops' conference did not inform its own standing
committee will be even more confusing.
"The bishops set up these avenues through which both they and
Development and Peace would work and all of a sudden that gets
overridden. That's disturbing," he said. "What's the point of having
them if they're not going to be used?"
But lobbying the government on policy does not amount to education, Grecco said.
"We can have that dialogue [on Canadian development policy]. I just
don't think it should be a campaign. That's not what D&P should be
about."