“Woe to those who build their houses by unrighteousness, and their upper rooms by injustice; who make their neighbours work for nothing, and do not give them their wages.” Jeremiah 22:13
On 5 and 6 November 2021, I reached a point no worker should ever reach.
I was not writing as a professional.
I was not writing as an employee.
I was writing as a human being in distress — asking for the harm to stop.
“I can’t take it anymore… I can’t breathe… It’s got to stop… It’s so inhumane and cruel.”
This was not a moment of weakness.
It was the predictable outcome of sustained harm — psychological, professional, financial, and social — inflicted in a system that was supposed to protect me.
This account reflects my lived experience, supported by contemporaneous records and communications.
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A Cry for Help in a System That Stayed Silent
In those pastoral messages, I described:
• ongoing victimisation and ostracism
• isolation from colleagues and even family
• escalating psychological distress without timely support
• repeated attempts to seek help — through legal channels, institutional processes, and community
And still, nothing changed.
“I’ve had no rest… uncovering systemic issues… on my own. Alone and frightened.”
I was asking for:
• safety
• dignity
• compliance with the law
• basic human respect
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This is impact
What institutional harm looks like when no one intervenes. When support systems fail, isolation becomes the loudest experience. |
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Faith Without Works
I wrote something that still captures the core of this experience:
“Faith without works is dead.”
This was not a rejection of faith.
It was a call to live it.
Because what I experienced did not align with the very principles the institution publicly espoused.
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What Catholic Social Teaching Actually Says
The Catholic Justice and Peace Office sets out clear principles on work and dignity:
(Full reference: https://justiceandpeace.org.au/catholic-social-teaching-on-work/)
These principles include:
• Employees are people first — not units of labour
• Work exists for the person, not the person for work
• Workers have a right to safe working conditions and dignity
• The measure of justice is how the most vulnerable are treated
And yet—
What happens when a worker becomes vulnerable because of the workplace itself?
What happens when:
• psychosocial risks are not effectively managed
• injury management obligations are not implemented
• the worker is isolated rather than supported
• processes appear to operate in ways that compound, rather than resolve, harm
That is not just poor practice.
It raises serious concerns about injustice in action.
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Dignity Denied
Catholic Social Teaching begins with human dignity.
But dignity is not a concept.
It is a standard of conduct.
It requires:
• action
• accountability
• moral courage
Instead, what I experienced was:
• silence where there should have been intervention
• inaction where protection was reasonably expected
• processes that, in effect, prolonged harm
Silence in the face of harm can operate as a form of institutional collusion.
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A Line Was Drawn
On 6 November 2021, I made something clear:
“Everyone has a choice to do the right thing.”
Because at some point, this stops being about misunderstanding.
It becomes about choice.
A choice:
• to act or not act
• to protect or to remain passive in the face of harm
• to uphold stated values — or depart from them
There are no truly neutral positions where harm is ongoing and foreseeable.
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The Reality of “Dignified Work”
The Church teaches that:
• work must support life, not diminish it
• working conditions must allow people to live as whole human beings
But what I lived was the opposite.
Work became:
• a source of trauma
• a mechanism of isolation
• a driver of financial instability
• a contributor to ongoing psychological injury
That is not dignified work.
It reflects what can occur when systems fail to meet their obligations.
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A Question That Still Stands
I asked this then, and it still stands now:
“Which of you will choose to do what is right?”
Because systems do not operate independently of people.
Decisions are made.
Actions are taken — or not taken.
And when harm is foreseeable and preventable, the consequences are lived.
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Closing Reflection
This is a test of whether:
• legal protections for workers are meaningfully upheld
• institutions act consistently with the values they publicly promote
• dignity is something practiced — not just expressed
And ultimately:
whether justice is acted upon… or deferred when it becomes inconvenient.
Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 213
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