Kairos organization carries on work of Jubilee initiatives.Group is `exercise in good faith' Pat Steenberg's office at Kairos Kairos (καιρός) is an ancient Greek word meaning the "right or opportune moment". The ancient Greeks had two words for time, chronos and kairos. is all dangling wires, empty shelves, boxes and stacks of papers -- bearing witness to the challenge of combining 10 social-justice agencies into one. Executive director since July 1, 2001, Ms. Steenberg and 24 staff are perched in rabbit-warren quarters in a struggling neighborhood in east-end Toronto until offices in another location are renovated. "We are building an organization, building an infrastructure from different focuses, different budgets, different people. It's been an enormous exercise in good faith on behalf of the staff and the people who support them," Ms. Steenberg said in an interview. Kairos, subtitled sub·ti·tle n. 1. A secondary, usually explanatory title, as of a literary work. 2. A printed translation of the dialogue of a foreign-language film shown at the bottom of the screen. tr.v. Canadian Canadian (kənā`dēən), river, 906 mi (1,458 km) long, rising in NE New Mexico. and flowing E across N Texas and central Oklahoma into the Arkansas River in E Oklahoma. Ecumenical Justice Initiatives, was born early in 2001 after several churches, including the Anglican Church of Canada, realized that church resources were stressed by maintaining membership in several groups pursuing such initiatives as Third-World debt cancellation and land rights for indigenous people. Kairos' major campaign currently is called Turning the Tables, which carries forward the work of the Jubilee jubilee (j `bĭlē), in the Bible, a year when alienated property and land were restored, slaves were manumitted, debts were forgiven, and a general sabbatical year was observed in initiative -- a
multi-church effort to persuade developed countries and institutions to
cancel debt owed by the poorest nations in the world. The three-year
Jubilee project ended in 2001.
Turning the Tables, which refers to the story of Christ overturning the moneychangers' tables, is aimed at "turning the tables on the way people think of debt," said Ms. Steenberg. The campaign wants to change the notion of debt as something poorer nations owe to one that considers "what we owe aboriginal people, the south, future generations, the earth," she said. The campaign uses an "invoice An itemized statement or written account of goods sent to a purchaser or consignee by a vendor that indicates the quantity and price of each piece of merchandise shipped. A consular invoice is one used in foreign trade. ," she said, "to call to account the leaders of the G-8 (industrial nations) for the debts we owe." Ms. Steenberg, 54, arrived at Kairos (a Greek word meaning "the right time" that the coalition also calls "the time that God gives to act") from a career that included no church work. She was, most recently, clerk for 12 years of the standing committee of finance at the House of Commons House of Commons: see Parliament. in Ottawa -- a job that involved coordinating the committee. Another Kairos activity is monitoring and reporting on the impact of Canadian government and corporate interests abroad such as Talisman talisman: see amulet. talisman amulet with which Saladin cures Richard the Lion-Hearted. [Br. Lit.: The Talisman] See : Charms Energy's oil drilling activities in war-ravaged Sudan. The organization also is involved in development work in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , working with southern churches to find and support local projects. The agencies now under the roof of Kairos were: the Aboriginal Rights Coalition, the Canada-Asia Working Group, the Ecumenical Coalition for Economic Justice Inter-Church Action for Development Relief and Justice the Inter-Church Coalition on Africa, Inter-Church Committee on Human Rights in Latin America, the Inter-Church Committee for Refugees Individuals who leave their native country for social, political, or religious reasons, or who are forced to leave as a result of any type of disaster, including war, political upheaval, and famine. , PLURA, the Task Force on the Churches and Corporate Responsibility and Ten Days for Global Justice. |
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