Friday, April 10, 2026

“Make the Abuse Stop”: When Dignity at Work Is Denied - November 2021

 “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.



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



This is impact


What institutional harm looks like when no one intervenes. 

When support systems fail, isolation becomes the loudest experience.


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.


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.


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.


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.


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.


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.


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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