Friday, 27 March 2015

The confusion of moving to the British capital to eventually help asylum seekers

ASSIST News Service (ANS) - PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609-0609 USA 
Visit our web site at:
 www.assistnews.net -- E-mail: assistnews@aol.com

Saturday, December 29, 2012

London Calling
The confusion of moving to the British capital to eventually help asylum seekers

By Adrian Hawkes
Special to ASSIST News Service
LONDON, UK (ANS) -- First of all, may I wish you a happy New Year! Secondly I would like to set the scene for second my column by telling you a few facts about London and its boroughs; there are 33 boroughs that make up London, though some don't use the name borough in the title for example, Westminster is called the City of Westminster and Kingston is Kingston upon Thames.
What was very confusing for a newbie like me, as I was in 1974 is the fact that most of the boroughs take their names from one of the districts in the borough, coming from outside of London that really confused me.
I came to London to with my wife Pauline and our family, to take charge of some local church communities, one of which I was told was in Islington, so I went to Islington and couldn't find anything that resembled the address, and that was before Sat Navs.
When a local looked at the address on my little bit of paper, I was told, "Oh, that's in Finsbury Park." I then explained that I had been told that it was in Islington. "Yes, it is," he replied. "Finsbury Park is in Islington." I then exclaimed, "But I am in Islington!" The patient local then explained that although I was in the district call Islington, Finsbury Park is actually in the borough of Islington actually quite a distance from the district of Islington. Very confusing! Now I live in Wood Green in the borough of Haringey, but just down the road is Haringey, also in the borough of Haringey.
I am telling you all this so you will get a picture of how complicated it can be for someone in London for the first time, and this affects my story.
As I explained in my last column, like many big western cities, London has lots of refugees and asylum seekers coming to the city. I work in a company that seeks to help these strangers in our midst. I get frustrated lots of times at the bad press that some of these hurting people get, they are often referred to as "scroungers" and also as people who are coming to "steal housing, jobs, and take advantage of our state system." I have taken the trouble to listen to some of their stories, so today I thought I would tell you Sue's story, not her real name you understand, but the story is real nonetheless.
Sue spoke excellent English, so unlike many refugees it was easy to listen to her story. I started by asking her how she had travelled to London and she explained that she has come on an airplane. "Which airport did you come to?" I asked because London has 5 major airports. "I don't know," she said. "So did it have a train station attached to it?" I asked, knowing which airports do and don't. I thought that would help me narrow it down. She then told me all that had happened; a man brought her through passport control and she had indeed gone straight onto the underground train told me that she had come into Heathrow airport.
She said the man put her onto the train, saying that he just needed to quickly go and get a special ticket. As soon as he left, the train pulled out and 16-year-old Sue was left alone. "What did you then do?" I asked, to which replied, "I began to cry. In fact I cried so much that I felt embarrassed so I decided I would get off the train, which I did and went upstairs on the moving staircase, but I could not get out into the street because I had no ticket. I began to cry again and a man in a uniform asked me what was wrong. I explained I had lost my friend who had put me on the train, and he said, 'Stand there and I will get you some help.' Very quickly a lot of men arrived they had guns, big helmets and things over their faces and they took me and put me in a big black van, where I cried even louder as they locked the doors."
Why they needed a bunch of riot police to put this slim built teenage girl into a police van I don't know. She said that when they unloaded her into a police station she was still crying, but she said that the policemen were "very nice" to her and kept trying to give her cups of tea, and buy food for her to try stop her crying.
She continued, "In the end, after I had told them my story, they said to me, 'We need to find you a bed for the night," and so they paid for me to stay in a hostel with lots of other girls, and they said that tomorrow I was to wait there and a 'Mrs. Social Services' would come and see me and help me. I waited all day but no one came. It became night and I was going to go to bed again, but the hostel people said you were only paid for, for one night so you cannot stay here. So I had to leave.
"I recognized it was not far from the police station so I went back there. They said they could not help me any further so I sat on the step of the station and cried and cried. In the end the police got fed up and said they would pay for me to stay in the hostel another night and they would make sure that 'Mrs. Social Services' came to see me the next day.
"The next day a lady came. I don't know what her name was, and she told me her borough could not take any more people who were like me, asylum seekers, but she said Haringey council probably would, and then she gave me some money which she said was for bus fare and told me to go to Haringey and they would help me. I think I was in the Hounslow area as that's where I got off the train. The lady left me to find a bus, and it took me all of the day to find my way to Haringey Social Services, and there they said they would help me and phoned you up to come and get me."
I then asked Sue why she had come to the UK and how come that she spoke such good English. "Well," she said, "my mother died when I was born, but my father was very important, but I don't really know what he did, but he sent me to the best school in Kigali [the largest city in Rwanda].
"Then, one day, a group of men came to our house and started shouting at my father and pushing him around. I was very cross, but the servant came and told me that my father could look after himself and that I needed to go to bed, which I did. When I got up my father was not there and I have not seen him since that day. The servants said that I needed to run away because, as one of them told me, 'Bad people have done bad things to your father and they will come back for you.' I knew that I had an uncle in the jungle so I went to his house. He and his wife took me in, but my uncle then raped me and I did a silly thing -- I told my aunt. In my culture you don't tell people things like that and my aunt was so angry with my uncle that she hit him on the back of the head with a machete and they had to put him on a motor bike and take him to hospital because he was so badly injured.
"I went to the hospital to see him, but when I got there I was told that my uncle had died.
 People started to say to me I must run away because, as one of them said, 'It is your fault 
that he has died and now the villagers will kill you." I went back to the city to my house, but 
it had been knocked down and was just rubble. I wandered around all day until I met an old 
school friend who said I could sleep at her house where she was living with her boyfriend. 
So, for a few weeks, I stayed there, but one day, when my friend was out, her boyfriend also raped me. This time I did not tell anyone I just left. I remembered that in the next town my
 father used to have a friend, so I thought, 'Let me see if I can find him, maybe he can help
 me."
It was hard to listen to Sue's story, but she continued. "Fortunately, I found my father's friend though when he saw me he was very afraid and he said, 'You will cause me much danger, because I knew your father." He paid for me to stay in a hotel and brought me food every day. He said he was making some arraignments to get me out of danger and him also. After a couple
of weeks he said I was to go to the next country and I would fly to another country where 
 I would be safe. That's when he introduced me to this man, who he said I should call uncle,
 he was the man that brought me to the UK and I lost him when the train left. It was horrible; however, I am glad I found Haringey and Phoenix Community Care."
Sue's heartbreaking story is typical of many we hear almost daily as we seek to help asylum seekers in one of London's boroughs.
For more information on our work, please go to: www.phoenixcommunity.org 

Adrian Hawkes is married to Pauline -- Dan Wooding was best man at their wedding -- with three children, 10 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. He is still part of the Rainbow Church North London which he used to lead and he also works with Sri Lankan churches in France, Switzerland, Norway, Canada and Sri Lanka, as well as a church in Norway. He helped to form Phoenix Community Care Ltd, which looks after some 30+ unaccompanied minors, and vulnerable adults in housing in North London; alongside his wife Pauline, he established PCC Foster Care agency and recently launched London Training Consortium Ltd., which trains refugees and asylum seekers with ESOL, IT, and Literacy. He has also written various books including: "Leadership and.," "Attracting Training: Releasing Youth," "The Jacob Generation," "HELLO is that you God?", "Culture Clash," and his latest, but first, fiction book, "ICEJACKED."He can be contacted by e-mail at: adrianhawkes@phoenixcommunity.co.uk&nb sp;

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The Houses of Parliament -- 
the part of London most visitors see


Tuesday, 17 February 2015

The Australian Prime Minister Angered my Wife.

ASSIST News Service (ANS) - PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609-0609 USA 
Visit our web site at:
 www.assistnews.net -- E-mail: assistnews@aol.com

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

London Calling
How the action of an Australian Prime Minister so angered us that my wife and I started 
a work to Asylum Seekers

By Adrian Hawkes
Special to ASSIST News Service
LONDON, UK (ANS) -- I had been pastoring a church in North London, when my wife 
Pauline and myself were shocked as we began to discover the plight of Asylum Seekers 
who were flooding into London from war zones like Sri Lanka, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
 Kosovo, Iraqi, Congo, Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq, to name just a few.

These were men, women and children who had escaped the violence of their homelands to make the long and dangerous journey to the British capital.

Pauline and I moved to North London in 1974, after ministering in a church in
Middlesbrough, a large town situated on the south bank of the River Tees in north east
England. While there, we had also had taken up the responsibility of leading two local
church communities in the area.

Now settled in London, and through a long series of events, we had taken the local
authorities training course and began to foster children on the council's behalf.
After many years of doing this, and getting somewhat older, we decided bringing up
teenagers should be for others.

Then one night in August 2001, while watching the news on
 BBC TV, we were horrified to see a story that a Norwegian freighter had picked up a group of would be refugees to Australia and they were caught in sweltering temperatures at Christmas Island and some were injured and I believe others
died in the incident.

The John Howard Government of Australia had refused permission for the Norwegian
freighter MV Tampa, carrying 438 rescued refugees, predominantly Hazaras of Afghanistan
from a distressed fishing vessel in international waters, to enter Australian waters.
 This triggered an Australian political controversy in the lead up to a federal election, and a diplomatic dispute between Australia and Norway
.
When the Tampa entered Australian water, the Prime Minister ordered the ship be boarded by Australian special forces.

This brought censure from the government of Norway who said the Australian Government
 failed to meet obligations to distressed mariners under international law at the United
Nations.

Within a few days the government introduced the Border Protection Bill into the House of Representatives saying that it would confirm Australian sovereignty to "determine who will
enter and reside in Australia". The government introduced the so-called "Pacific Solution", whereby the asylum seekers were taken to Nauru where their refugee status was
considered, rather than in Australia.

When the report ended, I had to protect the TV from being attacked by Pauline, who was
by now boiling with anger, and I explained that the TV was "not guilty" and the reporter was
just explaining the facts of the story. She then said, "I will go to Australia then and punch
that man."

After she calmed down, I told her that there were "loads of refugees coming to the UK
because of wars in their countries; so why should we not try and help them?"

Pauline agreed to ring the local authority and talk to them about this, especially as we
were quite well known to Social Services having fostered for them and led their foster
 team for many years.

I was surprised, though, when listening in to Pauline's phone conversation, as I heard a man
at the other end say, "Yes, I am the manager of the authorities' asylum service, is that
Pauline I am talking to?" It turned out that Pauline had worked on training other foster
parents for the department with this man who had now been promoted to manager of this
service.

I heard him also say, "If you want to help in this area, tell us how you will do it and we will
fund you. We will have you on board tomorrow." Wow, what a response, and that started
us our incredible journey.

Following the telephone conversation, we put together a program to help Asylum Seekers.
It involved housing, support and care, and just being there for especially the young people.
So we set up a company called Phoenix Community Care.

The name came about after a man I did not know came to me at a conference and said,
"I am calling you Phoenix, because you are about to lose everything, but God will restore
it many fold." Hence the name Phoenix. He was right. I did lose everything but God restored
it back to us, but that's another story. My youngest daughter donated her house to the work
and moved out.  We started off with our first client, a young Muslim girl from Congo, who had been raped and frightened and was looking for help.

Pauline collected her from Social Services and placed her in the house, which we had given
a "wow factor" by furnishing and decorating it as we wanted it to be really special for our
shell-shocked clients. This young girl went into the first room and climbed into bed without
even taking off even her outdoor coat and dropped off to sleep and did not wake up for a
couple of days.

Pauline, having finished the "I'm a professional placement manager" part, drove around the
corner and phoned me. She wept as she said, "Get more houses. There is a great need
here."

The work has continued to this day, and you can find out more by going to our website which is: http://www.phoenixcommunity.org.

I will be telling more stories in the week's ahead and I ask you to pray for us as we bring the
love of God to these many needy people who have seen so much hate and violence in
their lives.

Adrian Hawkes is married -- Dan Wooding was best man at his wedding -- with three
children, 10 Grandchildren and two Great Grandchildren. He is still part of the Rainbow
Church North London which he used to lead and he also works with Sri Lankan churches
in France, Switzerland, Norway, Canada and Sri Lanka. as well as a church in Norway.
He helped to form Phoenix Community Care Ltd, which looks after some 30+
unaccompanied minors, and vulnerable adults in housing in North London; alongside his
wife Pauline, he established PCC Foster Care agency and recently launched London
Training Consortium Ltd., which trains refugees and asylum seekers with ESOL, IT,
and Literacy. He has also written various books including: "Leadership and.,"
"Attracting Training: Releasing Youth," "The Jacob Generation," "HELLO is that you God?", "Culture Clash," and his latest, but first, fiction book, "ICEJACKED."He can be contacted 

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ASSIST News Service is Sponsored By Assist Ministry's
Iraqi Asylum Seekers in London

Refugees packed onboard the Norwegian freighter MV Tampa after being refused permission to enter Australia

John Howard, who refused to let the 
Norwegian freighter into his country

Pauline makes a plea for help

Another group, Women for Refugee Women, supports Women Asylum Seekers Together London, a self-help group of women who have sought asylum in the UK

Adrian & Pauline