Home ยป Posts ยป De Peiza calls for more inclusive approach in crime fight

De Peiza calls for more inclusive approach in crime fight

by Shanna Moore
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Chair of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) Crime Commission, Verla De Peiza says a broad-based and inclusive approach is needed to address Barbadosโ€™ rising crime rate.

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The call came in response to statements by church leaders advocating for a strong role of religious institutions in combating crime.

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Speaking during the commissionโ€™s second public consultation via Zoom on Sunday, De Peiza underscored the importance of recognising Barbadosโ€™ multicultural landscape when developing crime-fighting strategies.

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โ€œBarbados now is a highly multicultural society,โ€ she said.ย  โ€œNot only do we have churches, but we also have mosques, synagogues, the Rasta community, agnostics, and even some who donโ€™t believe in God at all. The crime-fighting mission has got to be one that encompasses all of them because in society, we have to learn to be tolerant of how other people think.โ€

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De Peizaโ€™s statements came in the context of discussions on the role of churches in crime prevention.

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Church leader Stephen Strickland argued that revitalising Sunday schools and vacation Bible schools could play a significant role in curbing crime.

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โ€œWhen I look at the Sunday School ministry across Barbados, I see that the Sunday School ministry has fallen apart, and vacational Bible school in itself has almost died,โ€ he said.

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Strickland lamented that many parents are no longer sending their children to Sunday school, leading to a generation of youth who, in his view, lack a solid moral foundation.

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However, the crime commission chair urged religious leaders like Strickland to recognise the broader societal changes and the need for the church to adapt.

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โ€œThe church has some homework then,โ€ she said, responding to Strickland. โ€œThey need to find a way to fix themselves so that they become more attractive to members of society if they are to be a part of the crime-fighting mission.โ€

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Adrian Bascombe of the Pentecostal Church also weighed in, challenging the notion that the church had โ€œdropped the ballโ€ in its role in addressing crime.

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โ€œIt takes a village to raise a childโ€ฆ As far as the church is concerned, yes, Sunday School would have played a pivotal roleโ€ฆ but the youngsters nowadaysโ€ฆ you can hardly see half of them coming to church,โ€ he said.

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Bascombe acknowledged that while some churches could be more proactive, his remains engaged with at-risk youth in local communities and prisons.

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De Peiza responded by calling for a more open-minded and community-centred approach from religious organisations.

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โ€œI do believe the disaffection with church has a lot to do with its positioning on some issues that society has moved away from,โ€ she noted. โ€œThe churchโ€™s hard-line position has driven people away, and they are the ones who are going to have to make that step towards society, as opposed to society making a step towards them.โ€

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