Jump to content

Dave Andrews (activist): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
After Excommunication: adding Aashiana
Line 43: Line 43:


==After Excommunication==
==After Excommunication==
Andrews has stated that he and his wife committed themselves to a creative, constructive course of action and experienced "a profound level of healing" over the next five to ten years.<ref name="Shoot1999"/> Dave and Ange and their friends started a residential community called Aashiana out of which grew Sahara, Sharan and Sahasee – three well-known Christian community organisations working with slum dwellers, sex workers, drug addicts, and people with HIV/AIDS in [[India]].<ref name="DaveAndrewsBio"/>
Andrews has stated that he and his wife committed themselves to a creative, constructive course of action and experienced "a profound level of healing" over the next five to ten years.<ref name="Shoot1999"/> In 1975, Dave and Ange and their friends started a residential community called Aashiana out of which grew Sahara, Sharan and Sahasee – three well-known Christian community organisations working with slum dwellers, sex workers, drug addicts, and people with HIV/AIDS in [[India]].<ref name="DaveAndrewsBio"/><ref name="Praxis">
{{cite web
| title = Praxis Volume two
| url = www.communitypraxis.org/pages/vol2.pdf
| format = pdf
| dateaccessed = 2007-12-25
}} </ref>


==The Waiter's Union==
==The Waiter's Union==

Revision as of 06:26, 26 December 2007

Dave Andrews is an Australian Christian anarchist author, speaker, social activist, community developer, Neopelagian thinker and a key figure in the Waiter's Union, an inner city Christian community network working with Aborigines, refugees and people with disabilities in Australia. Andrews is also a trainer for the Vision For Mission of the Uniting Church of Australia; an educator at large for TEAR Australia, a Christian international aid and development agency; a teacher for the Bible College of Queensland, the Brisbane College of Theology, and the Australian College of Ministries. [1]

Early Years

Andrews grew up the son of a Baptist pastor in the West End of Brisbane. After spending time in Afghanistan, he went to India with his wife Ange and spent twelve or thirteen years there through the 70's.[2] Andrews was excommunicated from Youth With A Mission by their International Council. [3][4] The reasoning, according to Andrews, was that "I was a rebel and, as an unrepentant rebel, would be summarily excommunicated," and that "it 'was what the Lord told' them to do."[4] Andrews described aftermath as devestating: "I became suicidal because all the significant people I turned to denounced me, no one else would speak to me, and the people who had promised to protect me ended up having psychological breakdowns. One guy was taken away to an asylum."[3]

After Excommunication

Andrews has stated that he and his wife committed themselves to a creative, constructive course of action and experienced "a profound level of healing" over the next five to ten years.[3] In 1975, Dave and Ange and their friends started a residential community called Aashiana out of which grew Sahara, Sharan and Sahasee – three well-known Christian community organisations working with slum dwellers, sex workers, drug addicts, and people with HIV/AIDS in India.[1][5]

The Waiter's Union

The Waiters' Union was founded as a non-formal network of spiritually minded activists who serve the homeless and the needy in the streets of West End.[2]

Published Works

  • Can You Hear the Heartbeat? Manila: OMF Literature, 1989.
  • Building a Better World. Sutherland: Albatross Books, 1996.
  • Christi-Anarchy. Discovering a Radical Spirituality of Compassion. Oxford: Lion Publishing, 1999.
  • Not Religion, But Love – Practising a Radical Spirituality of Compassion. Oxford: Lion Publishing, 2001.

References

  1. ^ a b "Dave Andrews, Christian community worker and author in Australia". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dateaccessed= ignored (help)
  2. ^ a b "The Spirit of Things". {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dateaccessed= ignored (help)
  3. ^ a b c Mitchell, Paul (1999). "Christi-Anarchy". Shoot The Messenger. Retrieved 2007-12-25. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ a b Andrews, Dave (2001). Christi-Anarchy. Oxford: Lion Publishing. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. ^ [www.communitypraxis.org/pages/vol2.pdf "Praxis Volume two"] (pdf). {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help); Unknown parameter |dateaccessed= ignored (help)