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Entries categorized as ‘JVC’

Hello from JVC’s new Programme Manager CLARE LEWIS

October 17, 2008 · Leave a Comment

After just one month officially in my new post at JVC, I have to admit I’m still working out which end is up, but finding out is a very exciting process!

Before JVC, I had quite a varied experience, which included running my own business, teaching, working as a volunteer and volunteer manager with other charities, and quite a lot of press and publicity work. I’m pretty sure I will be using most of the skills I’ve gained so far in running JVC.

I was able to join Marie, Austeja and this year’s group of volunteers for most of Orientation in September, and found it an inspiring event. We have a great bunch of people, and it’s a privilege for all of the staff team to be supporting them during their journey this year.

I’ve already been entertained by the Birmingham and Liverpool communities, and I’m looking forward to visiting the Manchester community soon. I’ve also visited some of the placements where our JVC volunteers are working, and it’s really heartening to see the work that’s being done to make people’s lives fairer, happier and more inclusive.

I was attracted to JVC by the opportunity to try to live and work by its values, and I passionately believe that JVC can change the world one person at a time. In a comfortable society like Britain, too many of us are ignorant of the injustice, poverty and exclusion right on our doorstep. JVC opens our eyes to this, lets us see just what life is like for those who are marginalised, and enables us to do something about it – in volunteer work during the programme, and by a lifelong change in attitude after JVC.

The staff team really wants JVC Britain to grow, and we’d appreciate the help of Holy Joe readers in spreading the word about the programme, helping us to find opportunities to talk to groups who may be interested in joining us, and offering to help us promote it, perhaps by sending us articles or photos.

We’re here and waiting for your response!

Categories: JVC
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News from former volunteers

October 17, 2008 · 1 Comment

Volunteers from 2007/8 let us know what they have been doing in the months since leaving JVC…

Sarah Willis is living in Leeds and training as an internal auditor (the good guys!) with Grant Thornton so that one day she can be a volunteer with really marketable skills!

Tom Viita is working in Leeds as the Campaigns Officer for the Refugee Council, very busy on his new allotment to grow his own vegetables, and trying to make time to pray!

Tanja Roske decided to stay in Britain and started her studies (Psychology) at Stirling University in Scotland some weeks ago.

Julia Babos has become an attendant in a museum in Budapest. Part-time, retired work. :)

Terry Conlan is waiting for his visa to go to Nigeria working with a project with kids and street projects for 8 months.

Birgit Garthe is currently enjoying her new Manchester life! Course in Speech Therapy is great so are her new friends! But she still misses JVC times…

Aura Polocenkaite is settling in Nottingham (she really loves it! …though it was quite hard in the beginning). She has started theology studies, trying to live at least three values of JVC without her community.

Quynh Thuy Vo wants to join the Jesuits but is waiting for them to accept women :) Meanwhile, she is working as a researcher in a life insurance company in Vietnam where she hopes to gain skills to work in an NGO related to economics for development. She is also helping with a group for Catholic students.

Diana Salazar is studying for a masters in environment and sustainable development while living with half of her community :)

Jo Lewis is studying in London and living with half her community

Jana Korcuskova is studying in Slovakia

And some news from other years

Paola Toledo (Birmingham 2004/5) and her husband Eddie are pleased to welcome into the world their son Diego. Diego was born on 14 September 2008. JVC will be pleased to recieve his application in 20 years or so.

Regina Duzy from Germany. (Liverpool 03/04) joined the Benedictine convent of Fulda this September and keeps in her heart all who are in some way connected to JVC and especially those she got to know during her year of volunteer work in Liverpool.

Lucie krupickova from Czech Republic (Liverpool 2006/7) recently came back from  pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela

Antonia Raetzel and Ian Quigg (2004/5) recently got engaged in Hawaii

Categories: JVC · community
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Summer Programme 2008

October 17, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This summer JVC welcomed Goda Venckaityte,  Jacques St Laurent, Eurelija Venskaityte and Kinga Kovacs to volunteer with homeless people and refugees in Manchester.

Kinga shares some of her thoughts on the programme…

I am not just happy but very grateful I could take part in both projects: the Rainbow Haven and the Cornerstone. I never faced what in reality means to be an asylum seeker. When I got to know that I was going to work with them I had to look the word up in my dictionary, I didn’t know what it meant. During this month I learnt so much about them, their lives, their feelings and fates, the process they have to go through ….I think I woke up to reality this summer! I thought England was the lords’ field, the home of castles, green grass, good-manner and wealth. Now I faced totally another face of the country. I am really pleased, I learnt there a lot about myself as well facing so much cruelty that people suffer near me.

Cornerstone also taught lots of things to me, I learnt forever: “Look at the person not to the problem”.

Categories: JVC · social justice
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Looking Back, Looking Forward: Jesuit Volunteer Community BY GED EDWARDS

October 17, 2008 · Leave a Comment

JVC recently held it’s 21st Birthday party in St Frances Xavier Church Liverpool, everyone agreed it was a lovely evening. Ged Edwards gave this speech, looking back at the first JVC community.

I’m delighted to be asked to speak tonight.  It’s a real privilege to be here on such an occasion, an occasion we could barely dream off 21 years ago.  I’ve always felt that JVC is a movement, not a voluntary organisation and our collective presence here tonight shows how true that is.

Lest we forget where we’ve come from, JVC was Jesuit Volunteer Corps and started in Alaska about 50 years ago.  Eddy Bermingham SJ was asked by The Society of Jesus, the Jesuits to set up JVC: Britain.  To do this in 1985 he approached 2 students Tess Clancy and Sue Hogg to go to the States to experience JVC programme there and to come back and after a short while take on the running of JVC: Britain which he started to shape in their absence.  While Eddy was recruiting the first community, building links with Community Service Volunteers and the Housing Department in Liverpool, Tess and Sue were in California and Montana.  At 21, Tess ran a soup kitchen for up to 600 homeless people a day in Sacramento which was part of the Loaves and Fishes Project inspired by Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement so she’s the longest-standing volunteer with us tonight.

Last September, twenty years after its formation of the first JVC: Britain community JVC Liverpool (or JVC Rialto as we knew it), we held a reunion attended by five of the first six JVC volunteers (Jo Sullivan, David Cronin, Ann Wilson, Patrick Sweeney and me), and Tess Clancy and Ken Vance from the Management Team and Sr Liz Stinson SND: Community Partner, four of us are here tonight.

We had a great day wandering around the European Capital of Culture.  We knew a different culture back then in Toxteth where we had lived for the year.  In 1987, the area was still struggling with the label of the infamous Toxteth riots of 1981 and burnt buildings and dereliction were to be seen everywhere.  We lived in two dilapidated maisonettes in Berkeley St which we had to decorate (after taking down the red light bulbs!) and hurriedly furnish with furniture from a flat where someone had done a moonlight flit.  In our JVC year our work took us away from Toxteth but we tried hard to support the local community and be accepted there too.  One of our community, Steve Jobling was a brilliant magician and the local kids a keen audience so that for the years the Liverpool community was based in Berkeley St, they were all known as “The Magies”.  We helped in the Toxteth Carnival in our year and when some children tried to break into the flat when we were away on the Spirituality Weekend, people we didn’t know came and boarded the place up late at night and thrashed the culprits.  We were in!

When we got to the area last September, it had changed so much.  Both blocks of flats, which had been so liberally decorated with graffiti, had been pulled down and new, smart terraces put in their place, and other houses given a facelift.  It was a great physical improvement but the memories of being there, in a place I thought of as so much as home, were still so powerful and I was glad we were together to experience it.

Then off to Liz’s for prayerful reflection.  We looked at the four JVC values of simplicity, community, spirituality (Ignatian) and social justice, where they had influenced us over the years and what they meant for us now.  We took time to reflect also on the JVC USA strap line “Ruined For Life”.  After all that time. were we?

We noted how the values were continuing to shape little things – like running the office tea fund – as well as having shaped major choices, like careers in health, social and environmental work.  The friendships we had had remained vitally important.  Some of us were ruined in terms of personal relationship: the quality of those relationships, people who had been complete strangers, had been so strong and now we badly missed community living and contact with like-minded people as we had spilt up over the UK and this was hard to come by.  Community is such a powerful, natural and necessary experience it will be rediscovered and JVC is part of that effort.  Where God is leading us is alive for us still and all of us are still strongly drawn to Ignatian spirituality with its foundation of contemplation in action.

Simple lifestyle had become more of an issue for some with environmental issues coming to the fore.  How can we live more simply and share what we have with others?  What are the benefits of this?  In terms of social justice, for most of us dealing with systems and bureaucracies rather than just with the people we signed up to help was causing us to scratch our heads.  We were being paid as professionals and we welcomed that for the most part.  But was this helping others as well as it might – or ourselves?  Again, the simplicity of being in touch with others as volunteers, running soup kitchens, cooking with someone who lives in a hostel or playing the piano in an old people’s home brought back vivid memories of individuals we had formed bonds with.

JVC: Britain started amid a blaze of interest from the Society which was exploring in particular how its charism of Ignatian spirituality could be used with lay people.  During the year we were visited by many people most notably by the then Provincial, Michael Campbell-Johnston SJ and by Alec Dixon, the founder of Community Service Volunteers who had advised President Kennedy on establishing the American Peace Corps who stayed overnight with us.  For us as the first volunteers, staff and support staff, for all the challenges, there was a sense of a great adventure, both personally and as a movement.  We were open to experiencing first hand something of the need for social justice, of the vitality and difficulties of living in community with people we had not met before, of living with the strengths and limitations of few choices and of finding God amidst this, individually and together.  For all of us, 1987-88 remains both a rich and influential period, a touchstone and influence for today and the future.  Eddy’s phrase to us was, “It’s not about getting the right answers but the right questions!”  That’s all part of being ruined for life – in theological terms, being dead to the world and truly alive for God’s work, building a fairer more compassionate kingdom here, now.

Jesuit influence

The Jesuits have always used their limited resources to influence the social fabric by helping people to find God in all things and, because of their courage and approach, that influence has been phenomenal.  The BBC is currently running the 2008 Reith lectures on China and has highlighted the Society’s work, in the shape of Matteo Ricci SJ in 1580, as the first westerners to enter China.  Their impact there and China’s interest in the West because of that is still being felt today.  St Francis Xavier had the same goals when he went to India.  Here in this Church named after him, Bro Ken Vance SJ and the team are seeking to influence modern Liverpool and are hosting as well a special exhibition next month Held in Trust  on the work of the Society in the UK to influence the Capital of Culture.

And the Society is hosting tonight’s celebration as it has so generously supported JVC for 21 years financially and with its Jesuit members in spiritual development particularly.  Why?

It does this because it wants every volunteer, to do what Ricci and Xavier tried to do.  To go into the places where people are excluded from Jesus’ message, to learn from them and live along side them to change the world for the better.  I personally want to thank Fr Michael on behalf of his predecessors and the rest of the Society for continuing to ruin my former conventional life and help to make me part of the Jesuit movement.  I’m sure many of us who have gone through JVC feel the same.  The challenge we took up continues – but God doesn’t leave us alone.  It’s God’s work we are about to make a fairer Britain, where personal relationships are valued and not cheapened, where spirituality is respected as part of the whole compass of human experience and where people are encouraged to see the wisdom and joy in simplicity in a world teetering to the edge of catastrophe through consumerism-led climate change.

On behalf of my Rialto community, thanks for listening and staying ruined!

Ged Edwards was one of the first JVC volunteers in JVC Rialto 1987-88 in Liverpool.

Categories: JVC · community · social justice
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Letters from Europe BY JULIA BABOS

October 17, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Júlia Babos attended the European meeting of Jesuit Volunteer Communities throughout Europe. While she was there she wrote her blog entries in English so her community back home in sunny Manchester could share her impressions. Now she shares them with you…

Letters from the European Meeting – vol 1

27th May 2008

So, here we are:

  • 3 volunteers + 2 staff from JVC Britain,
  • 4 (= the whole single community) + 1 from JEV Slovakia,
  • 2 + 2 from JVC Ireland (they also only have one community),
  • 3 volunteers from JEV Germany including the only Guy (Berlin, Leipzig & Vienna — but as it turned out, there are German JEV groups in Mexico, Brussels, Bosnia, and Romania, as well),
  • 5 + 1 from JEV France (Marseille & St Etienne — all volunteers but one who only noticed at the airport that her passport has expired..).

It’s a bit strange that the numbers of the participants don’t at all reflect the size of each programme…

There are some language barriers (for the first time in my life, I am among the betters with my English — no wonder after 8 months of use day and night) but we can overcome it. Strangely for me, those participants who are foreigners in their programme, are usually from a country that also has JVC. For example: a Slovak girl in France, or the other is a Lithuanian in Germany (so she’s at home now). The Slovaks are pretty shy with their English but fortunately their leader is Katka from JVC Birmingham 2005/06.

Today we had some icebreaking & group building, and then the presentations about JVC and the values in our country.

Some bits & bobs that may be interesting:

  • The Irish community lives in a worse area than Ancoats. It’s called Ballymun — it’s a towerblock quarter in Dublin. All their placements are there, too.
  • The Slovak girls were the most creative by the presentation: they sang a simple song about their days, with two recorders, a guitar, and a piano. They showed pictures and the lyrics. They live in a small village near Bratislava, where some Jesuit institutions are working, as well. And they only work for four days, Friday is a day for reflection and a mass.
  • The Germans have three “ordinary” communities, and some abroad but they all meet 4 times during the year. Those abroad send a letter every month in which they explain everything that is going on with them (mostly for the sake of their sponsors). I think this Lithuanian girl is the only foreigner in the whole programme.
  • The two French communities meet for a thematic weekend every month (such as community, violence-free conflict resolution, Islam (they meet more Islamic people a day than Christians, they said), and so on. Also, their values are called: service, community, spirituality, and “human formation” (these weekends).

Probably we are the only ones with internet at home.

Now there is an optional mass, and after that there will be social in the sauna. I think I’ll finish it for now.

2nd Letter: The Sky Above Vilnius

28th May 2008

The sky above Vilnius is about half blue and half cloudy (mostly with white clouds). It was a beautiful day again, nevertheless because we had a bit less work to do (or at least a bit less to do with words).

After a nice musical morning prayer (the Slovak girls are really musical!) we got on a bus, then on a trolleybus, and went to the social centre of the Blessed Jurgis Matulaitis parish. They work with children and youngsters mostly considered as being “at risk”, as well as people with learning disabilities, and also families, parents, mothers, pregnant women etc. It’s a not very spacious but nice colourfully painted place, you’ll find pictures later, probably. The church is especially worth having a look at…

What I found interesting & really nice was maybe two things. First, they will have 4 EVS volunteers soon (once they had a Muslim guy who worked with the learning disabled people where there is lots of spirituality going on, and he really enjoyed it). And second, they do recycle, which is something none of my (UK) placements can be bothered with…

The city itself, as far as I’ve seen it (from one suburb to another) is pretty much like any other “Eastern Block” cities (suburbs): smaller and bigger blocks of flats are standing one by one. But there is quite a lot of green around, even a forest! Almost everything was old around but the people seemingly all take care of their appearance. No one in jogging suit or pyjamas on the streets.

In the afternoon we had the presentations about social inclusion & our workplaces but now a French girl is waiting for the computer (meanwhile chatting a bit in Spanish with Diana :-) ) so I’d better take my leave [does anyone say this since the time of Jane Austen?]. I’ll try to go on tomorrow.

3rd and Probably Last Letter about Miscellaneous Stuff

30th May 2008

Now I should write about two whole days which will be surely beyond my capacity so I apologise in advance for not going into any details.

Yesterday at 11 we got on a bus, and travelled to Trakai, the historic capital of Lithuania. It’s a beautiful town quite close to Vilnius, with a castle on a lake (actually, more lakes, I think), some reminiscences of the historical minorities in Lithuania (the Karaites and the Tartars), and flourishing green surroundings everywhere.

We had kibinai for lunch, a Karaite dish, similar to a cornish pasty (filled with mutton and onion).

After that we came back to Vilnius, and had a long walk in the Old Town. We’ve seen lots of churches in various conditions, and heard interesting legends and stories from our nice guide. I think for me the most interesting was the (former) Jewish Quarter and the baroque Orthodox church with a strikingly grass-green iconostaz (turned into that from the former altar).

The dinner was in a popular traditional restaurant where there is a snake kept under the stairs (I am not sure whether this is a part of the local traditions). Marie, Tanja and me all ate cepelinai with different sauces; it’s really nice and really filling. :-)

After dinner (at around 8.30, I guess) we met the Baltic Jesuit provincial, who is a very nice guy. He greeted us as maybe the pioneers towards a Lithuanian JVC, and later on even joined us for the (presumed) folk dancing evening.

But unfortunately we went to another venue where there was no dancing but a great Norwegian group playing (mostly) the langeleik. It was absolutely perfect sleeping-music, so I soon found myself almost asleep… luckily, the others, too, so we hired a taxi, and headed home.

Today we had a nice (also singing) morning prayer (this time led by the French girls), then a game about living and working with people of different social and cultural backgrounds. Later in the morning we were given a little story from The Velveteen Rabbit, and some reflection questions on our JVC/JEV experiences. The sharing was in small groups from at least two different countries — we were just four with Tanja and two French JVC girls (one of them from Germany), so we could have a pretty good conversation with enough time for everyone. I found it inspiring.

Now it is free time after lunch, and because we’ll have half a day more for the city tomorrow, I stayed at the hotel. Silence is golden, all around…

Letter from Hungary – 4 Months Later

9th October 2008

What stayed with me from the meeting…? First of all, probably, faces. Faces of fellow volunteers (who are now all at home or somewhere else and I don’t know anything about them :-( – maybe I should write them…?), pieces of dialogs, both of funny and thoughtful ones. Then that incredibly blue sky (don’t forget, I arrived from and went back to Manchester!), the sunshine, the grass. And Vilnius, this little-great city. I must go back at some time or another.

Júlia Babos was a volunteer in Manchester 2007-8. When she wasnt flying to Vilnius she was volunteering in the Booth Centre and Manchester Prison Visitors Centre.

If you would like to see the brightly painted centre Julia mentions and some more of Vilnius, take a look at Flickr for the photos Marie took

Categories: JVC
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21st Birthday Party

April 22, 2008 · Leave a Comment

We are 21 years old this summer we are having a party.

If you ever did JVC, if you knew anyone who did JVC, if you were at a placement with JVCers, if you were a Community Partner or another nice person who JVC liked then please come along. we would love to hear from you.

Jesuit Volunteer Community

21st Birthday Celebration

7th June 2008
6pm Gather
6.30pm Celebration of Mass by Fr Michael Holman SJ, Provincial
followed by Buffet Supper and Party

St Francis Xavier’s Church,

Salisbury Street, Liverpool, L3 8DR
R.S.V.P. to JVC, 23 New Mount Street, Manchester, M4 4DE
Email:admin@jvcbritain.org Tel:0161 832 6888

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Former volunteers

April 22, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Memory and sharing session

Come along and meet like minded people, reunite with people from your year, chat with current volunteers, meet people from other years and share your experiences. For former volunteers, a chance to meet up before the celebration mass in the evening.

Liverpool Youth Hostel

2.00pm onwards Arrivals and Welcome

3.00 – 5.00 Memory and sharing session

This will finish at 5.00 so people can get ready to share taxis/cars to St Francis Xavier’s Church.

Places at this session are limited so please book a place at the JVC office.

If you require accommodation we have booked a limited number of places at Liverpool Youth Hostel for Saturday 7th June.

These places can be booked by calling the JVC office on 0161 832 6888 or emailing admin@jvcbritain.org

Please do this by the 7th May or as soon as possible as places are limited

A donation of £15 would be appreciated towards the cost of this accommodation.

If you need accommodation on the Friday night please contact the JVC office.

YHA Liverpool, 25 Tabley Street, off Wapping, Liverpool, Merseyside, L1 8EE

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Social Justice Residential

February 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The social justice residential took place in Feburary at St Buenos in Wales.
There was time to go for walks in the countryside…
walkers
We explained our placements using a toy box…
placement models 3
…and bits of paper.
making placement model
Reflected in the art room
artist at work
Worshiped together
offering
and stayed up late chatting
late night chatting

Categories: JVC · social justice
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New Holy Joe

October 28, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Once upon a time Holy Joe used to come through my letter box, it was real and I could hold it in my hands, smell the printer’s ink, read it on the bus and it always had an artistic something or other glued on the front. This was nice but it meant I could only show it to other people if they were with me and if my copy of Holy Joe hadn’t gotten lost under the bed.

So Holy Joe went online which saves the trees. This happened in 2006 but a lot people didn’t hear about it and some did but still missed having something you could read on the bus and pin up on a notice board.
We are making Holy Joe a blog. You can email it to your friends, you can link to it on your webpage, you can use an RSS feed to put it on your Facebook/blog etc, if you do that sort of thing. And it still saves trees.

But for those of you who like reading on the bus, you’ll be pleased to hear we’re going to take the best of this blog and send it out to people three times a year in a newsletter.

Wherever you read Holy Joe, we hope you enjoy these articles from last year’s volunteers – so good we couldn’t start the new face of Holy Joe without them.

Categories: JVC
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Ruined for Life! – by SARAH ROGERS

June 27, 2006 · Leave a Comment

This is the motto of JVC in the USA, and I have to say I rather like it!

The motto comes from the “brilliant ideas man” Jack Morris SJ, who set up JVC out of Portland Oregon in the 1950s. Back in November 2005, I had the chance to talk to Dave Hinchen, who was involved with introducing JVC to the East Coast in the mid-70s. Dave explained to me that all the branches of JVC in the US were set up directly by Jesuits, and that the four values started as three values which sprang directly from the Early Church in the book of Acts, as well as from Jesuit ideals. The three values were Christian community, simple lifestyle and social justice: the first was later split into community and spirituality as social changes loaded the words “Christian community” with too specific a meaning.

In 1980, for the first time, a branch of JVC was managed by a non-Jesuit. (This worked so well that when the British Jesuits decided to set up JVC here, they were determined that it would be run by non-Jesuits.) Intriguingly, almost all staff in the different JVCs that I spoke to are former volunteers.

At its biggest, JVC throughout the States had 500 volunteers per year! But JVC East decided quite deliberately to rein in their growth. There was a good community spirit within the whole group, and they didn’t want to sacrifice this to “success” as defined by maximum numbers. Now JVC has about 350 volunteers per year spread across the USA. JVC USA has 12,000 former volunteers! I met several of them as I visited other Jesuit works in the States, and all said that they have an immediate affinity with former JVCs, no matter what work they did or what city they were based in. There is an immediate trust and a sense of shared values. I have seen this amongst former volunteers of JVC here in the UK too, at events, pub evenings and parties where complete strangers seemed to get on almost instantly, as if they shared something important.

Dave Hinchen loves the “RUINED FOR LIFE” slogan, he said, “because life is never the same again after an experience of solidarity like this. The real good is in what volunteers do with the rest of their life”. From my own experience as an ex-staff member, I believe he’s right. And when I spoke to the current JVC East Manager, Kate Haser, she said that while many things change, “some important things are the same: our mission, the four values, the community life and how formative and shocking the JVC year is for everyone, and the real first-hand contact with people in poverty”.

Tom Gaunt, a Jesuit sociologist currently based in Washington, recently did some research into the impact Jesuit volunteering had on volunteers. From the results, he found the values of the volunteer’s experience “do not fade away as volunteers grow old, start families, and develop careers. The values of JVC maintain their level of importance in the lives of volunteers year after year.” What Tom picks out most strongly is the relationships that are formed during the year, and the way of thinking that influences people. He quotes one former volunteer as saying “The food for thought in spirituality is still with me. The JVC experience was a strengthening of my ‘other-directedness,’ and a reinforcement to be a courageous Christian.” Tom concludes by saying that it isn’t any one value that matters, but the combination of them all- “The JVC experience is transformative not just because it places individuals in situations and environments that are different from their own, but it does so in the context of community and prayer.”

The UK Jesuit Province is currently developing their volunteering opportunities, both part-time and full-time, nationally and internationally. If you would like to contact Sarah with your thoughts or ideas on the subject, you can e-mail her at: sarahjerogers@lineone.net

Sarah Rogers is currently Director of Jesuit Volunteering throughout Britain, working with Jesuit organizations that have volunteers in the UK and overseas, part-time and full-time. She was Project Coordinator and then Manager of JVC between 2002 and 2005, which is how she got sucked in to the Jesuit world! (She can’t seem to leave, which she blames on the Examen and a truly inspiring spiritual director).


Categories: JVC
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