The Camillian community of Vienna hosted the first meeting of the committee of the Camillian Task Force for the welcoming of refugees in Europe on 4-6 January. The decision to hold the meeting in Austria was made last October during the conference of the leaders of the Camillian Task Force in Bangkok. Father Leonard, with the help of Father Alberto and the whole of the Camillian community in Austria, decided to place themselves at the service of over a thousand refugees housed in a geriatric hospital which had not been used for two years and which had witnessed since its creation the presence of Camillians as chaplains. The committee was made up of Father Leonard and Father Alberto, representing the Province of Austria; Father Antonio Puca, representing the secretariat for ministry; Father Miroslaw, representing the Province of Poland; Anita Ennis, representing the presidency of the Lay Camillian Family; as well as Father Aris, Father Sam and Father Marco of the Camillian Task Force.
A careful reading of the scenarios of crisis at an international level certainly could not but pay attention to what we could define as an ‘exodus’ from the countries of the South of the world and in particular from Syria. 7.6 million people over recent months have left Syria to flee from poverty, hunger, war and immense destruction. The numbers on their own are not enough tell the story of a reality made up of faces, of dramatic stories but also of so much hope and tenacity.
The second part of the meeting was dedicated to a visit to the buildings that house the refugees. After dividing into two groups (one Arabic-speaking and the other Persian-speaking), the committee listened to the histories, the needs and the very great hardships of the people who had been taken in. Hearing accounts of the thousands of miles travelled on foot and by any means that came to hand, but also stories of bombs and violence, was not in the least simple. The subsequent meeting with the diocese of Vienna only served to confirm the long list of needs to which it was necessary to respond. Father Alberto and his volunteers accompanied us on this pathway made up of listening and the search for answers.