Articles, Interviews & Speeches
- Articles
-
Interviews »
- Interview with Vatican Radio in Rome
- Interview with Radio 4 'Today' programme on credit, debt & inequality
- Video: Archbishop - Pray for Zimbabwe
- Archbishop answers stimulating questions at Westminster School
- Archbishop's Easter Interview with BBC South East Today
- Interview with Radio 4 on Redevelopment of St Martin in the Fields Church
- Archbishop reflects on visit to Emmaus Homeless Community »
- Archbishop reflects on visit to Oakington Immigration Centre
- BBC Interview - Radio 4 World at One
- Archbishop criticises 24 hour drinking
- Archbishop on Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill
- Interview with Roger Bolton for The Sunday Programme on Radio 4
- Excerpt of Interview on the Nativity with Simon Mayo, BBC Radio 5 live
- Tea and Toast with the Archbishop
- Brief Press Encounter at Singapore University
- The Conflict between Religion and Modernity
- 2007 interviews archive
- 2006 interviews archive
- 2005 interviews archive
- 2004 interviews archive
- Speeches
Archbishop reflects on visit to Emmaus Homeless Community
Friday 22 February 2008
The Archbishops of Canterbury and York spent time during their joint visit to Cambridge looking at the Churches' response to homelessness by visiting the Emmaus Community in Landbeach.
The Emmaus Community at Landbeach is one of 14 centres in the UK that offers a home for up to thirty people who were formerly homeless which provides not only shelter but work in accordance with the principles of acceptance, sharing, working for others of greater need and self respect. Emmaus Communities enable people to move on from homelessness, providing work and a home in a supportive, family environment. Companions, as residents are known, work full time collecting renovating and reselling donated furniture. This work supports the Community financially and enables residents to develop skills and rebuild their self-respect.
Dr Williams reflected on the visit and on his concern for the very vulnerable in society saying, "I'm quite worried about what we see but also about the hidden elements in many cities where people are in vulnerable short-term accommodation and that's not always registered as homelessness, so people who do have a roof over their heads are still in some sense homeless because they have no security. And what's wonderful about this project, about Emmaus generally, is of course that it's not just a soup kitchen. As you can see, it actually gives people skills, it keeps them occupied, and it allows them to make a living which is ploughed back into the community life. And that sort of constructive work which gives people their dignity is hugely important I think".
When asked about the practicalities of engaging with vulnerable individuals on the edge of society Dr Williams said, "I think we start by not being frightened of them. We start by being willing to talk to them, ask their names and engage with them. And then, you know, projects like this give them a chance to show what they're capable of".


