The prison ministry founded by a Spanish Jesuit in the 1960s has had
such fruits as a group of inmates donating their own money to help the
needy at Christmas, according to the head of the foundation.
At Christmas of 2015, a group of prisoners in the Estremera prison in
Madrid did their own food drive to buy non-perishable food with their
own money from the prison store, Lola Navarro, president of the Father
Garralda-Horizontes Abiertos Foundation, told CNA.
“All the prisoners who participated agreed to deliver the more than
220 pounds of food to the Fr. Garralda Foundation to help those they
were thinking of, because they knew that there are people who needed it
more than they did.”
Helping prisoners rebuild their lives, overcome addictions, and
re-enter the workforce is a challenge that the Father
Garralda-Horizontes Abiertos Foundation has been working toward for 40
years.
Navarro said Fr. Jaime Garralda began to work with prisoners and now
serves, through his foundation, more than 200 people in prison, halfway
homes for parolees, and with workshops on re-entering the workforce.
“Fr. Jaime Garralda, S.J., lived for 16 years in in a shanty town
during the '60s. Many women there wanted to visit their husbands or
children who were in prison. Fr. Garralda and some volunteers began to
accompany them and began a social action work in the prisons, also
addressing all those realities related to the prisons,” Navarro
explained.
“We also have the figure of the 'volunteer resident', or prisoners
who are at the end of their sentence who help others in the prison
achieve their goals so they can set out on an itinerary so their stay in
the prison is as bearable as possible.”
She pointed out how this is “beautiful, because that person sees that
you have helped them and now they're the ones who get involved with the
other prisoners to give back what was given to them, and the horizons
that were opened up for them.”
The foundation has a rehabilitation center for prisoners who are
addicted to drugs where more than 100 people live, with floors for HIV
patients, and they vouch for prisoners who meet certain requirements so
they can request a supervised leave.
“We call this assistance “toward freedom” because family members or
friends need to give guarantees to ensure that the prisoner's leave from
prison meets some minimum conditions and also that he will return when
his permission to leave expires. We vouch for certain people who have no
one to turn to and we help make this transition as good as possible,”
Navarro said.
She commented that her favorite program is one they do for the
children of mothers who are in prison: “We organize camps for the
children, outings with the mothers, workshops to lessen the prejudices
created by prison, and we help mothers and children have a little more
of a normal life, at least for a few days.”