Sunday, July 28, 2024

Genesis 37, 39,41; Beat the traffic

Presented to TSA Alberni Valley Ministries, 28 July 2024 by Major Michael Ramsay

 

Read Genesis 37:12-36, 39:1-20, (Later 41:9-14)

 

These things and things similar still happen today. They happen here. Jun 26, 2024, 10:18pm, I had a text from David Wiwchar of the Peak Radio Station: "Are you aware of the Vietnamese men who are about to be made homeless by san group?"

"No. Not at all...but we can help" I replied.

 

I immediately set to work to try to find out what was going on. David’s common law wife works for Kuu-us Crisis Line, so I texted her boss, Colin, who used to work for us, and asked him what he knew about all this. He told me that the RCMP and the City were aware of the workers and that it was one of our employees at the Army who brought this all to light: It appears that they came to the Army for help but the information was not kept internal. It was shared with Kuu-us and not with myself and The Salvation Army. I followed up with the employee and let them know that this really is something that I need to know and it would be way better if this was confidential. I then contacted Sharon, my Area Commander, and the Modern Slavery and Anti-Human Trafficking departments of The Salvation Army seeking help and passing on the information that I had. At 3:35pm I received this reply:

Hello Michael, my name is XXXXX and I'm the Manager of Propel Anti-Human Trafficking Services. I'm trying to get a hold of you and your case worker XXXXX because I was asked to help support the 16 [alleged] human trafficking survivors that I heard presented to your staff yesterday. … With the information I have received so far I have secured a Vietnamese translator/counsellor who is on standby, a shelter on the island that can house all 16 survivors (at least temporarily), and I have an HT specific budget to help with whatever their needs are including transit to the shelter and clothing. I would love to speak with you further to get more information and support your team in whatever ways needed! My number is xxx-xxx-xxxx, hope to speak soon!

 

And then after he had contacted me earlier in the day, at 8:30pm that same night, our Member of Parliament, Gord Johns, reached out to me. He was on his was out to see the workers. He asked me to join him. I hopped in his car. We met a translator, Kimmy, who knew the people, just over the orange bridge. We then followed her out to the San Group property on Hector Road. The conditions the workers from Vietnam were living in were deplorable. There was sewage backed-up. It soaked the carpet. The men slept on mattresses side by side on this sewage-soaked carpet. The smell was terrible. There was no heat in the building. There was apparently no running water. The people bathed and washed their dishes in a ditch with water running out of a pipe outside. Gord, who has been in derelict buildings in town – maybe even more times than I have – said that these living conditions were even worse that the Port Pub that the city had just recently closed down because it is dangerously unsafe.

 

We spoke to the people through a translator. They said they paid between $20 000.00 and $30 000.00 to come here to work for a wage in excess of $30/hr. They said they never received that wage. They said they were subject to unsafe working conditions: working with toxic chemicals without proper protective gear, working long hours, many days in a row. They were afraid for themselves, and they were afraid for the safe transportation of their family. They showed us where they lived. They explained to us how they lived. They asked us to help them flee. I told them we could get them out tomorrow.

 

On Saturday, June 29th, 15 of the 16 workers were taken out of town to a secure Salvation Army facility in Victoria where they could have their physical, emotional and spiritual care needs met and where they could get the legal and other counsel that they needed. I checked up on them on Sunday. They were happy. They were free.

 

The following day I followed up with David Wiwchar, who was kindly waiting on releasing his story about the migrant workers until we could get them to safety. He brought all of this to light and hopefully many people were and can be helped because of it. When David Wiwchar broke the story other media followed up as well. CHEK 6 News toured the site with the San Group[1]:

It is where approximately 15 migrant workers who were under contract to the San Group were living until the Salvation Army’s anti-human trafficking unit moved them out on June 29.

The building reportedly did not have running water, and the men were allegedly forced to wash dishes in a small trickle of a stream out back and drink from it.

When CHEK News visited the Hector Road site Thursday, a small stream was still full of pots and plates in it. “This is where they were washing their dishes?” asked CHEK 6 News

“This is where they chose to wash their dishes,” said San Group’s general manager of terminals, Joe Spears.

“If someone chooses to use water, maybe in Vietnam that’s an acceptable practice, that’s normal housekeeping,” said Spears.

Inside the trailer was a very different scene from the video shot there one week earlier. San Group insists it was untouched.

“I didn’t touch it,” said Spears.

 

There were also previous accusations relating to San Group and where and how they housed foreign workers. Recently the fire department investigated their offices as San Group had a fire order issued by the Port Alberni Fire Department in September 2022 after there were accusations of them keeping foreign workers housed in their offices. The letter orders that no structures at the property “be utilized as sleeping quarters for any person effective immediately.” The PAFD checked to make sure that that was not happening there now. I believe they found beds there – even after the other workers had been rescued.

 

I don’t know that any of the people were trafficked – nothing has been proven in court – or who may have been behind it if they were. I do know that the conditions these people were living in were terrible.

 

“The Salvation Army is currently assisting several migrant workers who required urgent support,” said Gavin Randhawa, manager of marketing and communications with the Salvation Army. We ask the public and the media to respect their privacy”

 

The future of the 15 or so men that were being cared for in Victoria remains uncertain.

 

These sorts of things still happen today. The stories of Joseph and human trafficking and slavery are not just tales from a far a way place and a far away time. Canada’s laws are seemingly favourable to human trafficking. I was concerned about this even last century when I worked in international education. It seems just as bad now,

 

Shelly D’Mello, with the Inter-Cultural Association of Greater Victoria, told CHEK 6 that when it comes to the care of temporary foreign workers, the onus is on the company…Food, health, nutrition, housing in some cases, safety. When it’s a closed work permit, that employer becomes responsible for those pieces,” said D’Mello.

 

A closed work permit creates a dangerous state of dependency; as a closed work permit, versus an open permit, means the temporary worker’s visa is tied to a specific company. Closed permits make a worker much more vulnerable. For instance, the workers don’t qualify for MSP, so any injuries on the job are the employer’s responsibility to deal with. “And we’ve got to be careful that we don’t slide or slip in that obligation, that duty of care for those who are helping us,” said D’Mello.[2]

 

Canada’s reliance upon temporary foreign workers is growing. This is scary. This creates an environment where this sort of thing can happen all the time. I have heard of domestic servants and human trafficking in Vancouver. I have spoken to my Member of Parliament with another TSA Officer about human trafficking of farm workers when I lived in Saskatchewan. We have worked with trafficked, prostituted people in various cities across this country.

 

This is real life. This is happening. Here in Canada. Here in Port Alberni. This is scary stuff. So, what do we do? Well, if you know anyone who needs help let The Salvation Army know! We can get them out of there and get them the supports they need! Also, write to your Member of Parliament: tell them to stop enabling human trafficking; tell them to end unsupervised, closed work permits where an employer has that much control over a person’s life. Make the government check in on foreigners under their care (in their own language), make them protect those they are duty bound to protect.

 

Pray for people who are trafficked. Pray for people who are trafficked in this country, around the world, and here in this community. Pray for the underprivileged: the poor, the family-less, the immigrant. And help us help them.

 

And trust God. God was with Joseph when he was a trafficked domestic servant in Potipher’s household. God was with Joseph when he was sent to a prison in a foreign land. God was with Joseph in his hour of need and the scriptures say that in that he prospered.  And then God used a cupbearer to the king to deliver him and God used Joseph to deliver many other people in turn. We remember in when Joseph was in the depths of prison, Pharoah’s cupbearer, encountered him, there and though for a long time he did nothing, eventually he did something – two full years later – Genesis 41, reading from verse 9:

Then the chief cupbearer said to Pharaoh, “Today I am reminded of my shortcomings. 10 Pharaoh was once angry with his servants, and he imprisoned me and the chief baker in the house of the captain of the guard. 11 Each of us had a dream the same night, and each dream had a meaning of its own. 12 Now a young Hebrew was there with us, a servant of the captain of the guard. We told him our dreams, and he interpreted them for us, giving each man the interpretation of his dream. 13 And things turned out exactly as he interpreted them to us: I was restored to my position, and the other man was impaled.”

14 So Pharaoh sent for Joseph, and he was quickly brought from the dungeon. When he had shaved and changed his clothes, he came before Pharaoh.

 

Thanks to God using the cupbearer, Joseph was delivered from captivity as Joseph was earlier delivered from slavery. May we each be like that cupbearer. Even if we have been slow to help those in need thus far, even if we have forgotten, even if it has been years. Even if we have delayed in helping out those in need for both now and eternity, may we now be encouraged, may we now be faithful. May we now be spurred to action; so that like those workers we can be saved in the here and now. And may we also be faithful in sharing the Good News of Salvation so that we and all those we love may be saved for eternity as well.

 

Let us pray.



[1] https://www.cheknews.ca/new-details-emerge-in-case-of-alleged-human-trafficking-in-port-alberni-1212632/

[2] Quotes from: https://www.cheknews.ca/port-alberni-temporary-foreign-workers-await-their-fate-local-provincial-and-federal-officials-meet-1212611/

Friday, July 12, 2024

Dual Citizenship: Hebrews 11:13-16 and Philippians 3:10-4:1

Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, 03 July 2022 and 30 June 2024 by Major Michael Ramsay

 

 This is the 2024 version. To view the 2022 version click here: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2022/07/dual-citizenship-hebrews-1113-16-and.html

 

It is the wind down before Summer break in a number of agencies as such I tend to lend my support at their AGMs. I also sit on a lot of community boards,

 

I was at a board meeting a couple of years ago for the Neighbourlink Society: a group that provides food for children in the schools. Many of the people on the board have been friends for years. They were telling a few good stories. John and Carol are very good friends. John was giving Carol a hard time about her cooking because apparently shortly after she fed him a grilled cheese sandwich he had a heart attack – he was saying, ‘don’t let Carol make anyone any food’. Carol then told us more of the story. John was coming over to mow her lawn and after he had a lunchbreak, he headed outside to finish the work… and he did have a heart attack. They called the ambulance. It was quite significant. Carol was quite concerned. They took him to the hospital and then they actually had to fly him out by helicopter. You have to really understand the humour of these two for the rest of the story. As he was going up in the helicopter with his family and everyone around Carol yelled out, ”and don’t think I’m paying you! You didn’t finish the job!” The paramedic with John, in the helicopter, apparently said “I wouldn’t want to work for her” and then they heard her yell, “and don’t think I’m going to give you a reference”. John and Carol were laughing hysterically as they were recounting the story – especially as no one else there, at the hospital, at the time (including his adult son, I believe) realized that it was a joke. This made them laugh all the more.

 

This then got the stories going. One of them was telling the story of when their husband was in the hospital. A friend of theirs came to see him. Now he was in one of those rooms with more than one bed and there was a curtain drawn around his bed; so the friend went up to the other bed and thinking it was Fred (or whatever the husband’s name is) said, “Oh my goodness – Fred you look so bad I don’t even recognize you!” Fred's family then poked their heads out of where they were and said, “cut that out, come over here...”

 

Another lady told a story about when her mother went to the hospital to see her father and she leaned over to give him a big kiss only to realize that the fellow she kissed wasn’t her husband.

 

John then relayed the story of when he came up behind his friend and blew in his ear, for a joke, only to find out that it wasn’t his friend at all. It was some complete stranger’s ear he was blowing into. That gentleman did not receive that gesture very well at all. Board meetings can fun...

 

Monday is Canada Day. In light of that, I thought that we would look at the verse from the Order of Canada (and more) today. Can anyone tell me:

         What is the motto of the Order of Canada? desiderantes meliorem patriam, meaning "they desire a better country"

         Where does it come from? Hebrews 11:16

 

The Motto of the Order of Canada comes from Hebrews 11:16, “they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for He has prepared a city for them.”

 

Pierre Eliot Trudeau when he established the Order of Canada applied this verse to our nation but, of course, this verse refers to more than just our nation or any nation. It is great that he wanted to apply these Christian ideals to our country, just as an earlier generation had applied the Christian ideals of Psalm 72:8 to our nation – with the hope that our country would always take care of the poor and those on the margins. But to fully ascribe this verse to our nation, of course, would be a case of mistaken identity not entirely dissimilar from our opening stories. This verse and this passage (though extended) obviously isn’t actually referring to Canada. It is referring to someplace else. The second part of the verse, where it says that God has prepared a city for them… to what city is the author of the Hebrews referring? The new Jerusalem.

         Hebrews 12:22, “But you have come to Mount Zion, to the heavenly Jerusalem, the city of the living God” (cf. 13:14)

         Revelation 3:12 “Him who overcomes (I will make a pillar in the temple of my God. Never again will he leave it.) I will write on him the Name of my God and the name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem, which is coming down out of heaven from my God; and I will also write on him my new name.”

         Revelation 21:10 And he carried me away in the Spirit to a mountain great and high, and showed me the Holy City, Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God.

 

At the eschaton – the end of everything – the New Jerusalem, as referred to in Hebrews, Revelations, Philippians, and Thessalonians (where it mentioned the saints going to meet the Lord as He comes down) among other places, the city prepared for God’s children will come down from heaven to earth.

 

Philippians 3:20 says this, “… our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Saviour from there, the Lord Jesus Christ,”

 

Let us read more from Chapter 3 because tomorrow we will celebrate Canada Day and today, like all Sundays, we are celebrating on the Lord’s Day with our fellow citizens of Heaven. Let’s read some encouragement from Heaven, where as Christians, our primary citizenship resides. How should we, who will be resurrected, live out our time here in Canada as dual citizens of Heaven? While we are living here, we are actually primarily citizens of Heaven and the new Jerusalem which will descend from Heaven. Philippians 3:15 through 4:1 says this:

 

15 All of us, then, who are mature should take such a view of things. And if on some point you think differently, that too God will make clear to you. 16 Only let us live up to what we have already attained [our citizenship in Heaven].

17 Join together in following my example, brothers [and sisters], and just as you have us as a model, keep your eyes on those who live as we do. 18 For, as I have often told you before and now tell you again even with tears, many live as enemies of the cross of Christ. 19 Their destiny is destruction, their god is their stomach, and their glory is in their shame. Their mind is set on earthly things. 20 But our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Saviour from there, the Lord Jesus Christ, 21 who, by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body.

4 Therefore, my brothers and sisters, you whom I love and long for, my joy and crown, stand firm in the Lord in this way, dear friends!

 

Tomorrow is Canada and there are many good things and other things about Canada and about celebrating Canada Day. I always used to love Canada Day – the parades, the picnics, the celebrations; some places have fireworks. A few Canada Days ago I remember was quite somber as I spoke at the legion with so much going on in our country: Covid-19, the discovery of probable graves at the IRS and all the controversy around our government lowering our flag and not knowing how to raise it appropriately. Things then became quite uncomfortable and this year our community has no parade, no picnic, no official community events. I think it is still good to celebrate the many good things that we experience as part of Canadian community and I hope that our community will do that again at some point because there are many good things about living here and many things we can celebrate with our fellow citizens of Canada. It is good to celebrate some of the wonderful ways that God has used Canadians to help others: Fredrick Banting’s discovering penicillin and refusing to patent it so that everyone could access it regardless of income or circumstance, Terry Fox who died raising awareness and hope for people with Cancer. Tommy Douglas who made healthcare accessible to everyone who lives in this country and Lester B. Pearson who for a time made Canada Peacekeepers instead of war-makers. Blessed be the Peacekeepers. There are many thing we can thank God and praise Him for as He has provided for us as Canadians but let us never forget that – even more important that that -  we do have a dual citizenship and our other citizenship is Heaven and so even as we rejoice in the things God has done in and through Canada – and there are many good things, Hebrews 11:16, we are still longing for a better country—a heavenly one. For God is not ashamed to be called our God, for he has prepared that city for us.

That is our hope.       Let us pray.