<-Back Economics and Justice /Richard Hilken [ Up ] June 27, 1996 Next->

Richard Hilken on homelessness

"We need to see the problem of homelessness as only one end of a spectrum of evil that has the massive subsidies to owners at the other. It is a problem that will be as difficult and painful to solve as slavery. Slavery as an evil shared many of the qualities of the present housing situation - it benefited the wealthy, created an underclass and denied them human rights. The solution was painful, for abolition required that slave owners abandon their investment with no recompense. To change our attitudes to housing will be no less of a challenge to us than slavery was for the reformers, not only because institutional evil is hard to recognise but also because so many of us benefit personally from the present situation.

"We must first understand the present system and become clear about the extent of right and wrong that it contains. If we could achieve this, we could first work towards a consensus on goals and then, I hope with other churches, start on the secular arguments.

"This is a challenge that the Society, and indeed other churches, must face. If we fail to address the roots of an issue in which most of us are unwittingly part of the problem, we will need to look very carefully at the claims we make about our contribution to the world."

- Richard Hilken, 1992; 1993 Quaker Faith & Practice, Britain Yearly Meeting, 23.23 1995


Peace and Social Concerns Committee, Ottawa Monthly Meeting, Canada - CS, 27 June 1996