Carolyn Pogue

Carolyn Pogue writes a biweekly column for the United Church Observer.

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Jun 272013
 

The government doesn’t issue them, so I made my own.

By Carolyn Pogue

A few years ago, I noticed a clever back cover on Briarpatch magazine. It showed a First Nations warrior with a caption, “Where’s your treaty card, Pilgrim?” It was at once funny and arresting. Where, indeed, was my treaty card? Since the government doesn’t issue treaty cards to non-Natives, I figured I should make my own. I knew my treaty area and generally what that 1877 agreement says. I could start there.

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Oct 202012
 

Cutting child poverty, one paper doll at a time.

By Carolyn Pogue

I’ve been making dolls for more than 60 years, but I’ve never made them with such purpose as now. Nor have I made them with such fervent prayer, nor in the company of so many people. These dolls represent 70,000 Alberta children living in poverty. They are part of the ongoing push by the Child Wellbeing Initiative (CWBI) to raise awareness about this emergency situation. This is the passion of Alberta women in the United Church.

In 2010, the CWBI inspired people around the province to help with the poverty doll project. We began by making a rag doll for each of our 83 members of the legislative assembly.

It was interesting to be in the visitors’ gallery to see the surprise on the faces of the MLAs as they entered the house and found a doll sitting on their desks. Attached to each was a card with the question Jesus posed: “If a child asks for bread, who would give a child a stone?” The card also contained the five things we want for the 70,000 Alberta children who live in poverty: school breakfast and lunch programs, more affordable daycare and housing, higher minimum wage and a provincial poverty-elimination strategy.

On November 20, National Child Day, dozens of us will return to the legislature. We’re taking each MLA a pin, handmade by Sharon Prenevost of Lethbridge. Each bears a picture of the rag doll and reads “End Child Poverty.”

On November 20, National Child Day, dozens of us will return to the legislature.

We’ll hear MLA David Swann address the house on the problems that poverty presents to children (such as a poor standard of health, the risk of failure and school dropout), and how society is in turn impoverished by this situation. We’ll speak at a press conference and display the paper dolls. Hopefully, an 11-year-old will read her award-winning poem about poverty.

Throughout Alberta and Northwest Conference, people are cutting paper dolls. We even have helpers in Yellowknife and Fort St. John, BC. Our goal is to cut a doll for each child in poverty. Usually when I mention this goal, someone says, “Wow, 70,000 dolls is a lot!” That’s the point. It’s a lot of kids. And that’s just Alberta. In Canada, one in 10 children lives in poverty. Even UNICEF has turned its attention to child poverty in Canada.

Usually when I mention this goal, someone says, “Wow, 70,000 dolls is a lot!” That’s the point. It’s a lot of kids.

Some people like to tell how they “pulled themselves up by their bootstraps.” They say that it’s the parents’ responsibility to raise their kids. Yes. But when ill health, addiction or family violence means that children suffer, do we stand by? Charity is not enough, and poverty is never the child’s fault.

Our government officials say they are working on the problem; I believe them. But they need to work harder. At my downtown Calgary church, homeless people are given a cot to sleep on in the gym once a month at the city-wide Inn from the Cold program. In July, of the 21 guests in our gym, eight were children.

We must make the well-being of children a priority. None of us would sit down at dinner this Sunday and expect children to watch the adults eat most of the food.

Nelson Mandela said, “There can be no keener revelation of a society’s soul than the way in which it treats its children.” I add an Amen and reach for my scissors.
 

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Aug 302012
 

Calgary Peace Prize celebrates Gaza hero.

by Carolyn Pogue

On International Women's Day on March 8, I heard the most pro-woman speech I've heard in years. It was delivered by a man.

Upon receiving the 2012 Calgary Peace Prize, Dr Izzeldin Abuelaish of Gaza told his story to a sold-out audience at the Calgary Golf and Country Club. That's just about as far from Gaza as one could imagine.

There was no other sound than his voice in that room, not a whisper, no teaspoon clinking a cup, as Abuelaish spoke of the day in January 2009 when an Israeli shell struck his family home, killing three of his daughters and a niece. Rather than responding with anger, however, he dedicated himself to being a voice of peace and reconciliation.

 

“People are not important to the leaders from either side. You have to wonder if they have sons and daughters themselves.”

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Jun 262012
 

A guitar, a quilt and a peace centre hold together our stories.

by Carolyn Pogue 

I am writing a book about a rock. Beats me how this happened — geology isn't my forté. But my research into the Acasta River gneiss in the Northwest Territories, some of the oldest rocks on the planet, has given me one surprise after another. This one fits with Canada Day.

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