Before Brexit vote, liturgy highlights plight of refugees

IMAGE: CNS photo/Graham Lacdao, Chapter of St Paul’s

By Dale Gavlak

LONDON (CNS)
— As Europe held its breath on whether Britain would vote to remain or exit
the European Union, the U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR, reported that numbers
fleeing war and persecution have soared four times over the past decade, to 24 people
per minute or more than 65 million people forcibly displaced worldwide.

Concerns
over immigration might tip the so-called Brexit vote, but a June 19 liturgy brought
home the precarious plight of the displaced and how Christians respond to it.

A
stark, weather-beaten cross stood at the center of the ornate 17th-century baroque
St. Paul’s Anglican Cathedral in the English capital. It was carved by Italian
carpenter Francesco Tuccio from pieces of a boat wrecked Oct. 11, 2013, off the
coast of Lampedusa, Italy. More than 300 Eritrean and Somali refugees drowned
while attempting to reach Europe that day, but the inhabitants of Lampedusa
helped to save the lives of 155 others.

After
meeting some of the Eritrean Christian survivors and frustrated at what he
could do to help, Tuccio created a cross from the wreckage of the boat for each
one as a reminder of their salvation from the sea and hope for the future.

“There
were and are wooden boats coming to Lampedusa carrying people looking for help.
And I have helped many. I also saw children and adults downing,” Tuccio
said. “After I had seen so many landings, I was utterly dismayed.

“I
looked at Jesus nailed on the cross and a deep emotion struck me — now I am
the castaway searching for providence, desperately trying to give voice to the
scream that is dying in my throat, with a wish to raise awareness, to create a
solid chain of help,” he said.

“The
answer came, it was always there, in front of my eyes — Jesus. That is why I
built a cross from the wood of those refugee boats arriving in Lampedusa,”
Tuccio added. “I decided not to polish the wood, instead leaving it as it
is: a wretched witness, ruined by so much pain.”

A
similar cross was made for Pope Francis, who carried it at a memorial service
for those who had perished. The British Museum commissioned the cross displayed
at the cathedral, and it now holds a prominent place in the museum to mark an
extraordinary moment in European history and the kindness of tiny Lampedusa’s
inhabitants.

Tuccio’s
story first came to light by BBC’s Emma Jane Kirby.

“If
fear drives our responses, little wonder that we are inclined to separate
ourselves from those we see as ‘other,’ believing that they have no claim on
us,” Canon Tricia Hillas told Catholic News Service. But the “understanding
that God entrusts us to one another means that we can’t so lightly ignore our
connection.”

“This
cross is a reminder of the words of Jesus: ‘What you did to the least of these,
you did to me.’ Please pray for refugees today and for the world’s compassion,”
Canon Mark Oakley said.

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