With the federal prison system shutting down all visits, a priest has volunteered to be incarcerated rather than leave inmates without spiritual care.

“He offered to go there and live in the institution 24-7,” said Victoria Bishop Gary Gordon. “For a bishop to hear that from a priest, you say ‘OK, this is what it’s all about. This is the vocation — lay it on the line.’ It’s really beautiful.”

As COVID-19 infections begin to emerge in prisons, spiritual care for inmates has dwindled amid growing anxiety over the dangers faced by inmates and prison staff alike.

Bishop Gordon, who is the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops’ representative for prison ministry, said the priest who volunteered to remain with inmates has a deep and long commitment to prison ministry. He wouldn’t divulge the name or location of the priest to The Catholic Register for privacy reasons. Prison officials turned down the priest’s offer.

As the official liaison for Canada’s bishops with Corrections Canada, Bishop Gordon hopes to persuade federal officials not to completely cut prisoners off from their chaplains.

“If someone is gravely ill, then the priest should be allowed to bring them the holy Anointing of the Sick and viaticum,” he said.

The situation inside jails can be very dangerous, said Bonnie Weppler, executive director of the Church Council on Justice and Corrections. She compares the spread of COVID-19 in prisons to how it can spread in long-term care homes and cruise ships.

“What would you expect to happen? The same as you see happening in seniors’ homes. If one person gets it a whole bunch are going to get it,” Weppler said.

As of April 4, Corrections Canada had reported 12 positive COVID-19 tests out of 112 federal inmates who had been tested, with 20 more test results pending. Five of the positive tests were at the Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener, Ont.

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair has directed Correctional Services Canada and the Parole Board of Canada to find ways to thin out prison populations through early release.

Ontario is also “proactively performing a review for all inmates to determine eligibility for early release,” Solicitor General’s office spokesperson Kristy Denette told The Catholic Register

“We anticipate the number of inmates in custody will continue to decrease over the coming weeks,” she said.

While spiritual care has been classed an essential service and prison ministry visits are still technically allowed at Ontario jails, individual institutions are being very careful about letting volunteers in and out. Deacon Joseph Owusu-Afriye, who has for 10 years been a regular visitor to the Roy McMurtry Youth Centre in Brampton, was told he may continue his visits provided the young offenders’ jail wasn’t in lockdown and he felt safe doing so.

“I weighed all the options and had a talk with my wife, but we decided, ‘OK.’ There is some risk involved, but ...”

As long as Owusu-Afriye is reasonably sure he isn’t a source of infection, he intends to continue his monthly prison visits.

“This is the time that probably they need somebody to visit them regularly, to listen and be with them,” he said. “This is not the time I will abandon them.”

Just letting non-violent offenders nearing the end of their sentences out isn’t as easy a solution as it might first appear, said Weppler. 

“If they come out, where are they going to live?” she asked. “It’s not helpful to have them filling up shelters. The same kinds of things are likely to happen if we have them in shelters.”

Subtracting prison ministry from prisons, even for a short time, could have negative consequences for inmates and for the atmosphere inside the institutions.

“There is lots of research that, for religious or spiritually-engaged people, chaplaincy services are integral to those peoples’ mental health,” said Carleton University law professor Rebecca Bromwich in an email.

At the same time, the institutions must prevent visitors “from becoming disease vectors,” Bromwich said.

Catholics should be praying for prisoners and leaving the judgment to others, said Bishop Gordon.

“We’ve got a very vulnerable population in these institutions by virtue of their addictions history. We really should be offering up a prayer,” said the bishop. “Every human being has a right to everything a human being has a right to.”

The Catholic Register.


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