Jesuit Refugee Service /USA will commemorate 35 years of working alongside refugees and the displaced on December 1, and present Sr Denise Coghlan RSM with the JRS Accompany Award. Fr Pedro Arrupe SJ founded JRS in November 1980, in response to the exodus of refugees from Vietnam and Cambodia.
Sr Denise has served the displaced in Cambodia for the past 25 years, being one of the founding members of JRS Cambodia. She serves asylum seekers and refugees who seek protection in Cambodia, including the Montagnard who are not yet registered for the refugee status determination procedure, and stateless Rohingya and ethnic Vietnamese people.
Accompaniment is one of the three pillars of the JRS mission: to accompany, serve and advocate for the rights of refugees and other forcibly displaced persons. To accompany means to be a companion. The people in JRS are companions of Jesus who wish to be companions of those with whom he preferred to be associated, the poor and the outcast.
A Sister of Mercy and a native Australian, Sr Denise is internationally recognised for her efforts to ban landmines and cluster bombs. She played a key role in the work of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) that led to the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, an achievement for which the group shared the Nobel Peace Prize. She sits on the ICBL-Cluster Munition Coalition Governance Board, which advocates for universal acceptance of the treaty, survivor assistance, mine clearance and the monitoring of international law.
Sr Denise began working for JRS in 1988 in the refugee camps in Thailand near the Cambodian border – one of the most heavily mined areas of the world. Each day she met many people with missing limbs blown off by landmines, an experience that moved and inspired her to become actively involved in the international campaign to outlaw the weapons.
In 1990, JRS and Sr Denise moved into Cambodia to promote reconciliation and peace in the wake of the brutal Cambodian civil war. An early JRS programme was to bring together people with disabilities – many of who were former soldiers and enemies from the conflict’s four factions who had lost arms, legs and eyes from landmines – for vocational training, and to help them serve as teachers in society.
Based at the Mindol Metta Karuna Reflection Centre in northwest Cambodia, Sr Denise coordinates programmes there, helping visitors reflect on the challenges in Cambodia through the eyes of the poor and the lens of interfaith. Outreach activities to improve the quality of life and the protection of rights of people with disabilities in remote areas radiate from the centre.
Sr Denise previously was part of a pioneering Sisters of Mercy group that founded the first high school for girls in Papua New Guinea’s northern region, and also worked in adult faith education in the Brisbane Diocese of Australia.
In 2008 Sr Denise was awarded the Order of Australia for service to international humanitarian aid.
“I enjoy my work and am pushed by the love of the team and the people we encounter,” Sr Denise said. “I want the just and loving world God desires for us and I enjoy being part of making it happen.” [Jesuit Refugee Service USA]