The Society of St Vincent de Paul (SVP) has urged the Government to
mark the centenary of the 1916 Rising by living up to the pledge at the
core of the new nation: equality for all citizens.
Reiterating a call by the SVP National President, Geoff Meagher, for a
national debate on social justice in Ireland, Vice-President Tom
MacSweeney asked in an editorial in the Autumn 2013 issue of The SVP Bulletin, “Where then stand the ideals of the Republic of Ireland in which we live?”
Government action today had meant: “.. disabled people have suffered
withdrawal of services and cuts in grants, the health services are not
fit for purpose, it is becoming horrendously expensive for families to
educate their children, and to meet daily living costs….” Tom MacSweeney
commented.
He said those who advocate more austerity are well off, in
influential positions, and have insufficient concern for those suffering
from policies of austerity. They do not to have to seek help from
charities to buy food, to pay energy, utility and mortgage and other
bills.
SVP National President, Geoff Meagher, also warned that social justice must be at the centre of a nation.
In an article in the same issue of The SVP Bulletin, which
is based on his talk to the MacGill Summer School earlier this year he
said, “Social Justice must be at the centre of a nation which cares for
all of its people equally. That has been largely ignored while political
and economic issues have been concentrated on.”
He continued, “Now is the time to discuss what matters most to a
nation – its people and the situation in which they live, work or in
many cases try to exist without work,” he stated.
Geoff Meagher added that it is time to discuss the changes needed,
and to prepare for when the nation begins to emerge from economic
difficulties. “We should learn the lessons from the “economic disaster
caused by an unequal society,” he said.
He suggested that everyone should be involved in this debate –
Government, politicians, employers, trade unions, NGOs, charities, other
social justice partners and individual citizens.
“Thanks to the recession people’s lives are now controlled by an ever
smaller group of people, and this cannot be good for democracy,” he
said.
“As we approach 2016, what better way to celebrate our 100 years as
an independent nation than to commence that debate now?” Geoff Meagher
concluded.
One statistic SVP highlights is that approximately 733,000 people
live in poverty in Ireland and 232,000are now at risk of poverty.
The SVP Bulletin (Autumn 2013) is currently in the shops and available on www.svp.ie