11 August 2022

Faith Matters – Homeless

Article by Brendan Nicholls

Faith Matters – Homeless


As Winter transitions from cold short wet to crisp yet mild days that hold the bright promise of Spring our thoughts turn to the homeless in our region who are significantly impacted by the weather. Homelessness Week has just concluded and on Thursday our College will host the Winter Sleepout to highlight the injustice experienced by many and raise awareness and thus a voice for justice.

Homelessness in our region is a hidden problem. Recent statistics state that in the Geelong region some 883 people experience homelessness. With the ever increasing price and lower number for rental properties and economic pressures this number is expected to increase significantly in the short term.

Our community seeks to go beyond statistics and understand the people who experience homelessness and how they can be assisted. Homeless people are not a stereotype; they are parents, grandparents, children and those rejected by their families and support networks. Homelessness also looks very different to the stereotype most people attribute to the problem. Some people sleep rough, many homeless people however couch surf and have accommodation for short periods or use their car as their home; for many families this is what homelessness looks like.

Each of these people are valued and loved by God. Our role in society is to advocate for the disadvantaged and seek to support those at the margins. Our Church, via local parishes, serves via a small number of St Vinnies members who provide so much in our region to those in need. The winter sleep out at the College is inspired by the state-wide St Vinnies Winter Sleep Out and one we know helps educate and inspire our students to live the Gospel and change our world. That is how we love as God does. Join us in advocating for the homeless or supporting Vinnies (https://donate.vinnies.org.au/donation-hub) or Jesuit Social Services (https://jss.org.au/donate/).

I conclude by offering a short yet wonderful piece by our friend Fr Andrew Hamilton SJ from Jesuit Social Services.

Yours in Christ,

Brendan Nicholls | Liturgy Coordinator

Homelessness Week

By Fr Andrew Hamilton SJ

Once to have a home was seen as a right. Now it is seen as a privilege. The price of houses has risen enormously. Renting has also become more expensive. In rural areas to which many people have moved during the Covid Epidemic, local people are often priced out of the housing market. More people are forced to sleep in their cars and on the streets. At the same time, however, the houses left unoccupied are sufficient to provide accommodation for all who lack it.

The reasons why it is so hard to find a place in which to live are many. They include a change in attitude towards buying houses from looking at housing as shelter to seeing it as an investment to increase wealth. This encourages people to take out heavy loans to buy houses, which in turn raises prices. In the meantime governments that once took responsibility for housing people with little or no income have stopped building new houses or have sold existing stock. When immigration resumes we can expect even greater pressure on shelter and on rental prices.

It is easy to treat this situation as inevitable, particularly if we own our own houses. For that reason it is important to reflect on why housing is important and to imagine what we lose of ourselves when we have no place in which to live. In homelessness week many events help us to do this. The Vinnies sleep-outs in which many people prominent in public life listen to homeless people tell their stories and then sleep on the floor themselves have touched the imagination of those who take part. The sight of people sleeping on the city streets on a cold winter night has also evoked empathy and generosity.

These short and voluntary experiences of homelessness, however, show only part what it means to have nowhere to live. To be homeless cuts connections. If you have no fixed address you will miss mail, will find it hard to have things delivered, to have friends and family visit you, and to access government services. You will move often from place to place; your children will change schools, miss friends and experience only passing relationships. Even connections with the internet will become more difficult and expensive. With no kitchen, food will be expensive; with no laundry or bathroom it will be hard to maintain hygiene and clean clothing.

Many of the people, disadvantaged in many ways, whom we accompany at Jesuit Social Services see secure housing as their major need. Insecurity contributes to mental illness and withdrawal from society.

That is why in Catholic Social Teaching stable shelter is seen as a human right. In a modern society stable accommodation is necessary if we are to live fully as human beings with our dignity respected. Without it we shrink as persons, we lose touch with friends and family, and the connections with society that are central to our lives become precarious.

In our highly developed society we should demand of our governments that they take responsibility for shaping an economy that will allow people to buy or rent housing, and provide social housing for those who cannot afford it.


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