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The full transcript of the Archbishop's message is printed below:
Quite a lot of the images we're likely to remember from the footage of
the riots in the summer will be of young people out of control in the
streets, walking off with looted property from shops, noisily
confronting police and so on. It all feeds into the national habit of
being suspicious and hostile when we see groups of youngsters on street
corners or outside shops and bus shelters. We walk a bit more quickly
and hope we can pass without some sort of confrontation.
The events of the summer were certainly horrific. They showed us a face
of our society we don't like to think about – angry, destructive,
lawless. But it's crucial to remember that what we saw on the streets in
August was just one facet of a bigger and much more heartbreaking
problem. The youngsters out on the streets may have looked like a big
crowd, but they are a minority of their generation – the minority whose
way of dealing with their frustrations was by way of random
destructiveness and irritability. Most people of their own age strongly
shared the general feeling of dismay at this behaviour.
I've come to visit the charity Kids Company in London where today a lot
of young people are joining together to pack food parcels for needy
families in the neighbourhood. When you have a chance of talking to
young people like this you really get a sense of how they feel about the
society they're in and the challenges they face.
We have to ask, what kind of society is it that lets down so many of its
young people? That doesn't provide enough good role models and drives
youngsters further into unhappiness and anxiety by only showing them
suspicion and negativity. When you see the gifts they can offer, the
energy that can be released when they feel safe and loved, you see what
a tragedy we so often allow to happen. Look at the work done by groups
like the Children's Society or by the astonishing network of Kids
Company here in London, and you see what can be done to wake up that
energy and let it flourish for everyone's good.
One of the unique things in the Christian faith, one of its great
contributions to our moral vision, is the way it has spoken about
children and young people. Whether it's Jesus blessing children, or St
Paul encouraging a young church leader, saying, 'Don't let people look
down on you because you're young', or St Benedict in his rule for monks
saying that you need to pay attention to the youngest as well as the
oldest – Christian faith has underlined the essential importance of
giving young people the respect they deserve.
Of course they're not infallible; of course they have a lot to learn. So
do we all. But being grown-up doesn't mean forgetting about the young.
And a good New Year's Resolution might be to think what you can do
locally to support facilities for young people, to support opportunities
for counselling and learning and enjoyment in a safe environment. And
above all, perhaps we should just be asking how we make friends with our
younger fellow citizens – for the sake of our happiness as well as
theirs.
A very happy and blessed New Year to you all.
Hawkinge Gazette and Channel Coast
News 2012©

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