1 / 10

Multi-Faith Chaplaincy

Multi-Faith Chaplaincy. Keeping the Faith. Ahtsham Ali Muslim Adviser. History of Prison Chaplaincy. 1773 and all that; 1952 Prison Act; Prison Rules 1999 The move to Multifaith Teams and practice

dougal
Télécharger la présentation

Multi-Faith Chaplaincy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Multi-Faith Chaplaincy Keeping the Faith Ahtsham Ali Muslim Adviser

  2. History of Prison Chaplaincy • 1773 and all that; 1952 Prison Act; Prison Rules 1999 • The move to Multifaith Teams and practice • 357 employed chaplains – full or part time: 134 Anglican, 105 Muslim, 77 Roman Catholic, 50 Free Church, 2 Sikh, 2 Hindu • Approximately 700 sessional staff representing numerically smaller faith communities including Buddhist, Pagan, Jewish • Also 7000 chaplaincy volunteers

  3. Visual Multifaith Presence • Multifaith Team • Priest & Imam together • ‘Us & Them’ “All the people like us are We, And everyone else is They.”(Rudyard Kipling, We and They, 1926)

  4. 1952 Prison Act 10 Appointment of prison ministers • (1)Where in any prison the number of prisoners who belong to a religious denomination other than the Church of England is such as in the opinion of the Secretary of State to require the appointment of a minister of that denomination, the Secretary of State may appoint such a minister to that prison. • (5)The governor of a prison shall on the reception of each prisoner record the religious denomination to which the prisoner declares himself to belong, and shall give to any minister who under this section is appointed to the prison or permitted to visit prisoners therein a list of the prisoners who have declared themselves to belong to his denomination...

  5. Why do we enable faith in prisons? • Human Rights • Diversity • Positive influences in offenders lives • Reduce anxiety (safer custody) increase hope • Change motivation • Helps towards victim awareness and rehabilitation • Allows repentance and the assurance of forgiveness- that offenders can still make a positive change • Outside faith contacts may assist in rehabilitation and resettlement and enable support in the community • Safe place for social interaction inside • All these may help reduce re-offending

  6. equality does not mean sameness • “Men are born equal but they are also born different.” (Erich Fromm) • “Equality is not in regarding different things similarly, equality is in regarding different things differently.” (Tom Robbins)

  7. Resettlement of Muslim Prisoners A Case Study Keeping the Faith

  8. What we did • Generally: Not religiously religious but culturally so • Friday prayers • Classes / Literature • Family visits / links • Eid / Ramadan / etc

  9. What we did • Generally: Not religiously religious but culturally so • Friday prayers / which mosque? • Family visits / know how it works • Eid / Ramadan / etc • Classes / Literature – but take care The graveyard issue

  10. The advantages • Familiarity • Same lingo, same culture etc. • Know how etiquettes work. • Denominations / Castes / clans / family relationships

More Related