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Across rising waters
A Sister of the Good Samaritan will lead an Australian church delegation to the Pacific island nation of Kiribati in October to strategise on how to communicate the plight of the Pacific at the UN Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen in December.
Sister Geraldine Kearney SGS (pictured) said the initiative was part of the efforts of the Pacific Calling Partnership.
“We want to listen to calls from our low lying island neighbours in the Torres Strait and the Pacific about the serious threat that climate change poses to them,” she said. “From this, we seek to raise awareness of Australia's ecological debt to these peoples.”
Made up of low-lying coral atolls, Kiribati is one of the nations most affected by the sea encroachments attributable to climate change.
“The I-Kiribati and many other peoples in low-lying islands make minimal impact in causing rising sea levels but are asked by the rest of the world to pay the maximum price,” said Edmund Rice Centre director Phil Glendenning (pictured) who will be a delegation member.
“The future of Kiribati is at stake,” he said. “We need to ensure that people like the I-Kiribati are not excluded from the climate change debate. The world must listen. By going to Kiribati we begin this process by beginning with ourselves.”
This is the second time a Pacific Calling Partnership (PCP) group has visited Kiribati. A similar process was undertaken in October 2007 ahead of the Bali UN Climate Change Summit.
That group was able to assist in ensuring that a delegation was sent to the UN Bali summit with inclusion of representatives from the Torres Strait Islands, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea's Cataret Islands as well as Australia.
Conducted under PCP's Leadership Skills Exchange Program, the 2009 visit will involve 16 people from church-based PCP member organisations from NSW. The delegation will include Good Samaritan Oblate Patricia O’Gorman from the Wollongong Catholic Education Office as well as teachers and representatives of the NSW Ecumenical Council.
The group left Sydney on Wednesday, October 7, and will return on Friday, October 16.
It will meet with President Anote Tong, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Tessie Lambourne, government officials from the Kiribati Adaptation Program, and Australia's High Commissioner to Kiribati Brett Aldam.
At the grass-roots level, ideas will be exchanged with church leaders, members of religious orders, education officials, school students and teachers from primary and secondary schools.
The highlight of the trip was expected to be when members of the Leadership Skills Exchange Program join with I-Kiribati climate activists to make preparations for taking their message to the world at Copenhagen.
“All of this follows up the work already commenced as a result of our very successful participation as official observers at the UNFCCC in Bali in 2007,” Sr Geraldine said. “Our participation at Bali in 2007 certainly put us on the global map.
“In 2008 and 2009 we worked extensively on our home fronts and consolidated our home projects and programs and instituted a Pacific Outreach program among Pacific Islanders resident in Australia.” she said.
Another Good Sam, Claire Anterea SGS, has been one of the PCP team in Kiribati helping with the in-country arrangements.
The project will be filmed for a documentary aimed at educating Australians and I-Kiribati in the effects of climate change in their own localities.

Goals of Pacific Calling Partnership Leadership Skills Exchange to Kiribati:

top: Kiribati leadership skills and cultural exchange, September, 2007
middle and bottom: Bali Climate Change Summit, 2007
all photos courtesy of the Edmund Rice Centre, Sydney
see also A WORD FROM CLARE