July 2020

Updated last on June 30th 2020


Dear Sisters and friends,

This July we offer some inputs from the Sisters in the UK and we welcome all inputs from around Ireland and England. Below you will find some of the work that has taken up our time at the Justice Desk over the last month. This said we are also focused on what will be ahead of us in the coming month with the High Level Political Forum at the UN that presents and opportunity to 5 IPA countries to present on their Voluntary National Reviews with respect to their achievement of their SDGs. We will be making daily updates to the events that will take place at the UN here and we always welcome your comment.

Brian

For all of our Monthly Newsletters and Days of Significance
Over the past two months there have been a number of webinars, meetings, reports, launches and publications in respect of the SDGs and the UK promise. You can read more here
As part of our work at the Presentation Justice Desk we align with (subscribe to) like minded NGOs, Charities, Civil Society Organisations and Religious Groups. We list these alignments here and you can visit their websites by clicking their logo,
I have added a new video of a webinar on entitled Jubilee for the Earth on June 9th 2020
Celebrated on June 8th 2020. This newly created page is a browsers page, short videos, pictures from Ireland & the UK and further afield. With some information and the World Ocean's Day Newsletter.

We are grateful for the "Words of the Day" from the Presentation Sisters in Dubuque Iowa

This July we see a completely virtual High Level Political Forum that will allow 5 IPA Countries to present their Voluntary National Reviews over the next 10 days. I have built a Website below that will tell you all you need to know about the forthcoming UN Meetings, the IPA Countries, the daily timetable and the events. YOU CAN ATTEND ALL by turning up when the events are on (remember New York is 5 hours behind us). This site will be the Presentation contribution to to Civil Society in that we hope to advertise as many Civil Society Side Events as possible. You can attend any of these side events by registering your attendance. If you do attend why not write short report (we'd love to hear from you) and send it to us at presinterprovjustice@gmail.com,

Click Below for the Timetable for the 10 Days

North Pres in the news..... again! 👏

This lovely article is from the Irish Examiner.

We must definitely be the most famous school in the country these days!!!!! And rightly so.... 🤗

We may be a small school but we have a big heart 💙

The International Presentation Association together with many other Religious Congregations have co-signed the statement below that calls for a Debt Jubilee to tackle the Covid-19 Health and Economic Crisis. You can read the statement here

A New type of politics for all?

Just leaving it here, no Minister For the environment (at cabinet) despite a #BiodiversityEmergency

This sermon of Fr. John Daley of Leicester was referred to us by Sr. Margaret Finnegan UK and so I will leave it here for you. Sermon begins on minute 16 of the mass.

WELCOME to St Joseph's, Leicester, for our celebration of mass. During these difficult times of pandemic we hope that our broadcasts are helping bring a little peace and hope into your prayer at home. We wish all who share this mass with us a prayerful and blessed celebration.

All music used in this streamed recording is used under license and with permission. The detail of today's music is as follows and more general information on presentation, copyright and permissions is given beneath today's list.

This piece of art has been prepared to capture the essence of the Covid Pandemic and what it means on a human level, the isolation, the cocooning, those with underlying illnesses, the elderly and their vulnerability and separation, This affecting piece of art speaks to all differently. It's worth pausing to take it all in.

Season Of Creation Webinar "Jubilee for the Earth: New Rhythms, New Hope"

Well worth the Watch as we might prepare for the Season of Creation this coming September

The International recordings of "The Blessing” (by Cody Carnes, Kari Jobe and Elevation Worship) have been made during this time of pandemic. It was important to honour the inspiration, whilst at the same time, honouring the unique history and culture of our island. So they chose a song that would resonate across the island, with every denomination and cultural grouping, one that could be used as a platform to sing a Blessing over our land, all our key-workers and those they are caring for. “Be Thou My Vision” is just such a hymn written over 1000 years ago. It reminds us of the One to whom we should look in this time of pandemic, whose presence is our light, the source of our wisdom, in whom we find our treasure and where we find victory.

Individuals from 300 Christian churches and organisations located in every county on the island submitted self-recordings of vocals and instruments which have been compiled by our creative team to produce this music video - we hope you receive a blessing as you watch it.

Years of friendship continues between Choctaw Nation and the Irish people. A Story of Hope

"An Arrow Through Time," painting by Choctaw artist and author Waylon Gary White Deer (Courtesy of Waylon Gary White Deer) https://bit.ly/36OwGof

From Sr. Teresa Kennedy in England.

2 pages

From Sr. Catherine O' Neill in Nechells UK

includes photos below.

Rose Bush planted by Sister Pius Nechells inner city garden.

Front garden Nechells

Nechells Inner city garden

Rose Bush planted by Sister Pius Nechells inner city garden

Scented Jasmine planted by Sister Pius near the back door Nechells

Back garden Nechells

Sr. Mary Deane and Sr. Susan Richert in Shirebrook UK

2 pages

by Deirdre Mullan

The destiny of our two peoples had become intertwined and continues to do good today. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, ravishing our broken world, this story has again surfaced into Irish consciousness. Little did we realize what the Choctaw story told when they led the Famine Walk in 1990 would awaken in the Irish worldwide.

Forty-eight countries are expected to present their Voluntary National Reviews (VNRs) during the July 2020 session of the UN High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF).

The presentation of VNRs are a central focus of the annual global “check in” on implementation of the SDGs – the HLPF. VNRs present each country’s experiences, policies, and institutions for the implementation of the SDGs.

The yearly report of the UN Secretary-General on progress towards the 17 SDGs has been released ahead of the 2020 session of the UN High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF). The report draws on the latest available data on the indicators contained in the global SDG indicator framework as of April 2020. It also highlights implications of the COVID-19 pandemic on each SDG.

Progress is stalled or reversed on inequalities, the rate of climate change, and the number of people going hungry.

Love your garden? Then say ‘no thanks’ to horticultural peat

28th May 2020

Business at garden centres is booming as people emerge from lockdown to start working on their gardens. Most people who care about their gardens also care about nature. Ireland’s richest source of biological diversity is not in our gardens, but in our peatlands.

Our bogs have been described as Ireland’s rainforests. Peatlands also contain our largest natural stores of carbon, as well as playing an important role in flood protection and water filtration.

So why are gardeners helping destroy Ireland’s richest biodiversity without even being aware of it?

Many gardeners buy commercial compost, and most compost sold in Ireland contains peat. Our bogs, built up over thousands of years, are being scraped and mined and turned into garden compost. The State-controlled Bord Na Móna is the largest producer of horticultural peat, but around a half a dozen other large commercial operators are also involved.

Bord Na Móna has announced plans to phase out dirty and inefficient peat mining for electricity production, but has no intention of exiting horticultural peat. In fact, in mid-2018, the company expanded into providing peat as bedding for livestock. Some operators may advertise their compost as having ‘low’ or ‘reduced’ peat content, but without independent verification, those terms are meaningless. Any peat content in compost supports the continued draining and destruction of our peatlands.

In 2018, Irish companies exported nearly half a billion euros worth of horticultural peat, much of it to the UK. Last January, the UK’s Committee on Climate Change recommended banning peat extraction for all uses in the UK. “There would need to be an accompanying ban on the sales of peat, given that two-thirds are imported, mainly from Ireland”, the Committee added.

Bord Na Móna says it is committed to reducing horticultural peat sales by 50% “as we transition to non-peat based horticultural products”. It claims to be keen to exit from the business. “Our ambition is to lead the way in this regard and not to be dragged along kicking and screaming”, Tom Donnellan of Bord Na Móna told the Oireachtas Committee on Climate Action last November. The surest way to make sure this commitment is honoured in full is for the public to say ‘no’ to horticultural peat.

The government late last year issued a Consultation Paper reviewing the horticultural peat sector. In response, The Irish Peatlands Conservation Council (IPCC) pointed out that “The horticultural industry has had free rein to destroy substantial habitat for decades as the majority operate outside of planning and licensing and they have done little to protect SAC and NHA raised bog sites as a gesture towards mitigating their destructive impact”.

Further, the IPCC drew attention to the anomaly that no carbon tax is levied on horticultural peat, despite its obvious and quantifiable climate impacts. An Taisce would fully support, as an interim measure, the levying of carbon taxes on horticultural peat, pending an outright ban on its extraction and sale.

“There are good quality peat-free compost alternatives available to gardeners”, according to an An Taisce spokesperson. “When you’re visiting your garden centre or DIY store, be sure to ask specifically for peat-free compost. And if you object to bog destruction and care about biodiversity destruction and climate change, please consider asking your retailer to consider reducing or eliminating its use of unsustainable and ecologically damaging horticultural peat”.

Alternately, many people are now making their own compost. There are many resources online and your local authority environmental awareness officer will also have information. The IPCC, which is dedicated to saving Ireland's bogs, has useful instructions on its website: http://www.ipcc.ie/advice/composting-diy/composting-using-a-heap-cone-or-bin/

The Aran islands have turned sustainable compost into a community business, with Athchursail Árann, the Aran Islands Co-op Recycling Project. It was recognised for eliminating three landfill sites and creating a community recycling system over 20 years. They generate compost on an industrial level with all the compostable material they collect on the islands.

Love your garden? Love nature? Then, for peat’s sake, say ‘no’ to the destruction of our bogs and ‘no’ to horticultural peat.

Contact: John Gibbons, PRO (087-2332689)

/ENDS

Covid-19's Impacts on God's Creation and Vulnerable Communities

This invitation was sent to us by Sr. Jacinta McKillion from England and can be listened to as opposed to being read.

You can find the latest issue of Together for the Common Good here

I attended so many of the Webinars that have been offered by the Friends of the Earth Recently. They have recorded them all so that should anybody like to learn a little more about the topics covered they can do so here

ECI Newsletter May-June 2020.pdf

Plastic Free July anyone?