Easter People Bring Hope
Jim
Consedine
Is ÔThree StrikesÕ Sinful?
The Catholic Worker in Christchurch has been involved
recently with three families affected by imprisonment. One man is ending a
lengthy sentence and is due out soon. All his latest letters indicate that he
is fearful of the future, of having to cope alone on the outside with all the
prejudices that our culture carries for ex-prisoners. He has Ôgate feverÕ in
spades! I can see him back inside after committing more crime within a short
period of time. The time he has spent (and he hates prison) has virtually
programmed him into returning. Prison has reduced him almost to an automaton. He
is frightened of leaving the safety it offers.
A second has just written to say that he is back
on remand having reoffended. He apologized for abusing the trust we placed in
him. He said that outside jail he simply couldnÕt cope. He was pleased to be
back where he felt secure. A third is the wife of a long-term prisoner, mother
of his five children. She struggles to make ends meet from week to week and her
teenage children are a handful. He is no sooner released than he re-offends. He
is relatively happy in prison because he has been there so long. It is his
family who pay the real price for his offending. All three have become institutionalised by their years of incarceration. Their
families receive a sentence as well.
Church
Teaching
In 1988, the New Zealand Bishops Conference
published a statement which described imprisonment as Ôa poison in the
bloodstream of our nation.Õ It was an insightful comment. In 1999, the world
Catholic prison chaplainsÕ conference meeting in Mexico, in line with the
social teachings of John Paul II (On
Social Concerns, 1987), named prisons Ôstructures of sinÕ. Both statements called for a more
constructive way of dealing with crime and its effects on victims and offenders.
They challenged Christians to practise forgiveness
and communities to provide healing mechanisms for individuals affected by
criminal offending. They sought change in societies where poverty, inequality
and injustice were seen as spawning grounds for crime.
These statements represent a vision of what an
Easter people might hold in faith about their brothers and sisters affected by
crime, both victims and offenders. We know the teachings of Christ call us to
live in a way different from lives dominated by Ôthe principalities and powersÕ
of this world. His teachings call us to a radical love of our neighbour in whom we find his Risen presence. The Easter
post-resurrection stories teach that the Risen Christ lives ÔdisguisedÕ in our neighbour. Further to that, Christ calls us to build Ôa new
creationÕ - to be different and do things differently, particularly in the
field of relationships. It is challenging stuff for believers.
Regrettably, in the field of penal policy in New
Zealand, we remain light years from such a vision. And the light seems to be
getting darker. In the past 10 years, New Zealand has managed to double the
numbers it sends to prison. And we have made their sentences much longer. The
current muster is 8250, treble what it was 30 years ago.
With ACT wagging the governmentÕs tail so
vigorously, this darkness is obvious in the latest Ôthree strikesÕ crime legislation.
If ever a law defies belief and makes no sense, this has to be it. Even the
Ministry of Justice opposed it. It strikes right at the heart of the Easter
message of hope. Just as every new prison built is a sin against hope, so
enabling legislation is equally sinful.
With New Zealand already outstripping all its
Western allies (with the exception of the US) in its high imprisonment rate, it
defies belief that an intelligent leader like John Key can sit on his hands and
allow our prison system to grow and continue to gobble up valuable resources
which could be better used elsewhere. Prisons are one of the few growth
industries we have.
Cutting back on healthcare, education and social
services in order to expand the prison industry is simply wicked. That in effect
is what is happening. Every week there is a fresh debate about government
spending cuts. Great spin is placed on how these are presented to the
electorate. For spin read ÔmassagedÕ truth. Many have swallowed the spin and
think the government has no option at a time of recession. That is certainly arguable.
However, what cannot be argued intelligently is
that somehow putting more people into prisons is going to cut the crime rate.
Paradoxical as it seems, all the evidence is that it expands the rate. The last
ten years have seen prison numbers blow out massively since the Norn Withers
petition pressured the Labour administration into increasing sentences and
building more prisons. Recent statistics (April
2010) show crime rates, especially violent crime, have expanded too, up by several
percent points and climbing. It seems that higher prison rates leads to higher
crime rates! Can the government not smell failed policy even when it is rotting
at their feet?
A
Spiral of Violence
The demand for harsher penalties is insatiable.
It can never be met. The reason is because the urge to punish forms part of the
unredeemed ÔshadowÕ or dark side of human nature. Enough is never enough. To
paraphrase John OÕDonohue, Ôthe turbo motor within
the shadow spirit ensures that.Õ A dark side is something we all share in
varying degrees. As indeed is our grace-filled or ÔlightÕ side. ÔGod is lightÕ
says St John. Our life choice involves a journey towards the light of love and
true justice, or a choice for serial vengeance which can never be
satisfied.
One major issue we face is that there are huge
vested interests intent on maintaining the status quo. These include the
construction industry, prison officer unions, the majority of police, much of
the judiciary, the corporate media, and many politicians. The latter know that
people get frightened and there are votes in fear mongering.
Part of the problem also is that prison does not
prepare released prisoners to live on the ÔoutsideÕ. Long term imprisonment brutalizes
their spirit and almost guarantees they canÕt. Yet this is what Ôthree strikesÕ
represents – longer sentences with little chance of ever again making a positive
life outside the walls.
ÔThree strikesÕ is more than a strike against
criminals and their families. It is a strike at the very foundation of a fair
and just judicial system. To make more penalties mandatory and further remove
discretion from sentencing judges who hear all the facts is to change the way
we do criminal justice.
The cost of the new laws is mind boggling. It is
scheduled to cost an additional $356
million over the next 50 years, in addition to the current prison budget. Imagine what could be done productively
with that spending! Paradoxically it is presented as Ôa better deal for
victims.Õ What nonsense. It is vengeance pure and simple. Innocent children of
offenders, especially thousands of the most impressionable who are at primary
and secondary school age, will suffer as much as anyone with a parent locked
away for years. This is so unjust to the children affected.
The reasons for re-offending are clear enough. Prison
undermines social and community relationships and the sense of belonging, so
vital to healthy living. Most emerge with their confidence and social skills at
rock bottom. Most prison inmates have addictions of one form or another, mainly
alcohol related. Many are poly addicted. Only the lucky few get to do a proper
addiction programme while inside prison. Most of their relationships, fragile
as they may have been on the outside, are effectively destroyed during a lengthy
term of imprisonment. Few survive with relationships intact. Ask Nelson
Mandela.
Many lose contact with their children because of
the vengeful social system we have built to punish their parents. A new
generation of struggling one-parent families is constantly being developed. The
social service cuts announced recently will guarantee these solo families will
remain in poverty. The cycle of social deprivation is guaranteed to expand. What
are the odds of these children ending up in prison themselves in a decade or
two? All the evidence says many
will. Our social systems have combined to make it so.
It needs to be said that a huge amount of effort
goes on in the community to prevent much of this happening. There are some amazing
programmes and efforts made to counter the poison that prison produces. Some of
the effort is heroic. Sadly, such efforts are under resourced and the odds of
success are not good.
Social Justice
– Not Vengeance
Rosemary McLeod made an interesting point in a
recent column. ÔIf cruelty is what we deplore and punish, why do we speak in
the language of cruelty ourselves when we discuss our worst criminals? If
severe anti-social behavior is what we despise, why do we limit our perception
of that to violence alone? And if we are so scared about rising violent crime,
why donÕt we apply equal energy to dealing with its causes?Õ The Press, Christchurch, 28 January 2010
A government with courage and vision could start
to change all this. They could announce a moratorium on new prison
construction. They could re-allocate a decent slice of the current $574 million
budget from prisons towards community-based drug and alcohol rehabilitation programmes
(80% of inmates have addictions) and widespread anti-violence programmes,
develop parental training centres, subsidize job creation schemes, promote more
personalized community policing, legislate more stringent controls on liquor
outlets and advertising, create better mental health facilities and programmes
(20% of inmates have mental health issues) and provide funding for more community-based
restorative justice programmes. Prison musters would be reduced substantially
and prisons could be maintained for only the worst offenders. This would bring
us nearer to Scandinavian models.
Allowing governments to get away with developing
legislation like Ôthree strikesÕ and expanding the prison system to house a new
influx is wicked. It wastes millions of dollars of precious resources and
simply pampers to the private fear mongering of ACT and the punitive tendencies
of many other MPs.
For the sake of future generations, we must do
better than this.
Jim
Consedine was a Christchurch prison chaplain for 23 years.