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missionaries and malaria

Last week, one of the voting members at the ELCA Churchwide Assembly urged us to remember Will Herzfeld, who served as the executive of ELCA Global Mission and who died of malaria that he contracted while on a trip to Africa. In addition to the impact malaria has on the lives of our African sisters and brothers, let us also lift up our ELCA  mission personnel whose lives can be affected by the disease. A few days ago we received this note from Anne Langdji, the ELCA’s Regional Representative for West Africa.  She wrote:

“Nice to read the good news about the Malaria Campaign this morning. And it came in between phone conversations with Pastor Jackie Griffin, who arrived in CAR two week ago to start work with that church’s Women’s Organization, “Femmes Centrafricaines pour Christ”.  I welcomed her in Bangui and got her settled in the village of Bohong, where she is spending two months learning Sango.  She spent the past year in N’gaoundere, studying French, and had earlier served in Congo, so is somewhat comfortable in this new setting.

Unfortunately, since this weekend she’s been experiencing her first case of malaria and it’s been hard.  She’s getting good care both from local Catholic health centers and the staff of Lutheran health centers who are visitors in Bouar for a training.  She’s our only ELCA personnel in country right now as Pastor Deborah and Joe Troester and daughter are still on home assignment.

I would ask you to lift her up in prayer.  Many others are suffering tonight as she is, but she is one who has been sent by the ELCA to serve and right now she’s suffering and receiving the compassion and expert care of our Central African brothers and sisters, as well as a German missionary doctor.”

So together, let’s remember Will, and praise God for the good care that Jackie is receiving.  And let’s support the work of the ELCA Malaria Campaign that will make possible excellent malaria treatment and prevention  for many more people in the near future.

Jessica Nipp
ELCA Malaria Campaign

The Boy Who Saved Cleveland

Looking for a way to engage the youth of your congregation in the ELCA Malaria Campaign?

Might I suggest this book: “The Boy Who Saved Cleveland,” by James Cross Giblin, illustrated by Michael Dooling. It’s a chapter book for early readers, and is based on a true story. In the settlement of Cleveland, Ohio, Seth Doan’s family farms the land. An outbreak of malaria hits Seth’s family and all of their neighbors. While the adults are ill with malaria, Seth takes over the very adult tasks of carrying and grinding corn to keep his family and their friends fed.

“The Boy Who Saved Cleveland” is a great way to introduce the subject of malaria to a group of youth. It describes the symptoms and relates them to likable characters. It brings one story of malaria to life, and will doubtlessly engender interest in other, contemporary stories — stories of our brothers and sister in Africa who struggle with the daily realities of malaria.

(Note: while malaria used to be prevalent in the Unites States, it has been very nearly eradicated here since the 1950’s.)

Focusing on Women and Children is Important

(posted by Audrey Riley for intern Karen Ward)

During the United Nations Millennium Development Goals Summit in September 2010, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and others called the world to action with “1,000 Days: Change a Life, Change the Future.”

What does this mean? Damage caused by malnutrition in the first 1,000 days of a child’s life—from conception to age 2—is largely irreversible. Malnourished mothers give birth to malnourished infants, perpetuating the cycle of poverty. The “1,000 Days: Change a Life, Change the Future” campaign seeks to end that vicious cycle. “We must remember the critical role that women play in the health and well-being of their families—starting with nutrition,” said Asma Lateef, director of Bread for the World Institute.

ELCA World Hunger focuses on women and children through nutritional programs, health care, microloans and more. In Peru, women traditionally produce beautiful woolen handcrafts. But when a community organization began to help women collaborate, this traditional craft became an important source of income for them and their families. “When we first started working together,” said one woman, “our husbands thought we were just leaving the house to gossip. Now that we have an income, they don’t complain so much!” ELCA World Hunger, working through our partner Lutheran World Relief, brought the women an electric wool-spinning machine, increasing their production and income. Your generosity to ELCA World Hunger make sustainable solutions like this and much more possible.

But why focus on women in particular? There are links between gender inequality and hunger in the developing world. Around the world, 70% of those who suffer from hunger and poverty are women. In addition to serving as the primary caregivers for their children’s health and well-being, women also make up the majority of small-holder farmers who struggle each day to grow enough food to feed them. The Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World, has said that the strongest correlations exist between hunger and lack of education. Educated women in the developing world are more likely to avoid early pregnancies, HIV infection, domestic violence and exploitation. An educated mother is far more likely to send her children to school, ending the generational cycle of poverty.

Despite the vital roles women play, inequalities in education, economic empowerment, political participation and access to basic health services have a harsh impact on hunger and malnutrition. Gender inequality must end in order for us to reach the Millennium Development Goal of cutting world hunger in half by 2015. Learn more at ELCA World Hunger: Women and Children .

God bless,
Karen

Karen Ward, the 2011 summer intern with ELCA World Hunger, has moved on to her next call: seminary studies. The World Hunger staff team is sorry to see her go and wishes her the very best.

Out of the mouths of babes…

Mark Anderson is an assistant to the Bishop in the Northeastern Iowa Synod. He and his whole synod have been working energetically and passionately to raise money for the ELCA Malaria Campaign.

(If you haven’t yet, consider “like”-ing the group “Friends of the ELCA Malaria Campaign” on Facebook. This is a group administered by Mark, but open to anyone who wants to be in conversation about the Campaign and how we can support it.)

Mark posted this last week on the Friends of the ELCA Malaria Campaign page:  “I just met Skyler in Dubuque who had been saving her allowance. She donated her entire savings to the ELCA Malaria Campaign during Vacation Bible School. On the way to church she said ‘Mommy, I think a child is more important than a new toy.'”

You’re right, Skyler from Dubuque…. a child’s life is so much more important than a new toy. Thank you for teaching us to prioritize!

Garbage, garbage everywhere

Is garbage really disappearing? You’d think so, from my last two cheerful posts (here and here). But I have a darker view today, because I had to do garbo.

“Garbo” is an inescapable duty for Holden Village volunteers, who must all put in at least one morning processing the previous day’s waste. At 8:15 am, we report to the quaint-sounding Garbo Dock for a couple hours of hard work. First, that morning’s five-person team breaks down and bundles cardboard boxes for recycling, setting aside waxy fruit boxes to send back to the growers. Next, we load the kitchen and dining room compost cans onto the pickup truck. We tuck them next to a dozen or more large plastic bags the Village Garbologist has collected from cans around the village—cans labeled Landfill, Burnable, or Recycling. When the truck is full, we walk to the Garbo Dock and spend 20 to 45 minutes opening and sorting the contents of those bags, one at a time, into the correct container.

We pluck candy wrappers and half-filled yogurt containers out of the recycling, moldy sandwiches from paper bags, toothpaste tubes out of paper towels. We separate plastic by number; glass into green, brown, and clear; stash items to be landfilled into bread flour sacks. All kinds of odd things turn up as we sift: toothbrushes, pennies, batteries, love letters, peach pits, postcards. When everything is in its proper place, we walk up a long hill to the compost pile. Depending on the village census, we dump and chop four to eight 32-gallon cans of compost into little pieces with flat shovels. Each day’s compost is slightly different; on my morning, we chopped coffee grounds and filters, kale stems, orange peels, oatmeal, and tomatoes. When the mixture is fine enough, we add it to one of the nine compost bins, throw in sawdust and already cooked compost, string up the electric bear-and-deer barrier, rinse out the garbage cans, and call it a day at about 10:00 am.

But not before we load the bundled landfill and recycled items into old school buses whose windows have been replaced with metal to keep bears out. Every few months, Mattias the garbologist unloads the buses onto a truck that he drives down the mountain, onto a barge, and, at the other end of the lake, to the Chelan County Waste Transfer Station. There he re-sorts the recycling and tips the landfill materials into a dumpster that goes to the landfill in Kittitas County, where more people and machines handle what Holden Villagers have discarded.

His daily duties have not made Mattias optimistic. He doesn’t think garbage is diminishing or that people are changing their ways.  “Once people throw something out, they don’t think about it anymore,” he says. “I know that 95 percent of this stuff is going to sit around forever. It’s really depressing.”

I was depressed, too.  Four hundred people trying to live lightly in the wilderness still generate A LOT of trash. Sorting it, you confront wastefulness (who threw this away??), laziness (why did this person skip sorting?), a pretty high ick factor, and a stern reality check to fanciful notions about the disappearance of garbage.

Nature, unlike humans, operates a closed system that converts one living being’s waste into another living being’s life source. Not us. We invented “away,” as in “let’s throw this away,” and then set up wonderful systems to take our trash there. A morning committed to garbo reinforces the truth that there is no away. Away is still on our planet (although Mattias has some intriguing ideas about sending trash to space) and in our—or someone else’s—neighborhood.  Throwing away something is a process that involves lots of steps and people, from the stewardesses who pick up your inflight drink to the hotel maids who clean your room and countless janitors and waste haulers who bend, sort, lift, and carry what used to be yours to its resting place in a transfer station or landfill.

Mattias does feel that the hundreds of people who participate in garbo leave with more insight into their role as wastemakers and clients of the mythical “away.” And watching garbage come and go, he  has determined one step he plans to take to create less waste. He is giving up disposable razors—one of the items he sees most frequently—and investing in an old-fashioned razor. The kind you don’t throw away.

Anne Basye, Sustaining Simplicity

“abUSed: The Postville Raid” – The Mistreatment of Foreigners in Our Land

(posted by Audrey Riley for Karen Ward, intern)

“When a foreigner resides among you in your land, do not mistreat them. The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the Lord your God.” (Leviticus 19:33-34)

In 2008, the largest meatpacking plant in the United States was raided by 900 Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. 289 immigrant workers were detained, charged and quickly convicted of document fraud and related offenses. Their average sentence was five months in federal prison, followed by deportation. None of the immigrants charged had any previous criminal record, not even misdemeanors. All were in the United States to escape poverty in their home countries, support their families and work a dangerous job that most U.S. citizens are unwilling to take. The event devastated the small community of Postville, Iowa, the town Agriprocessors and its employees called home.

The documentary film abUSed: The Postville Raid tells the events of the raid and the aftermath. Through the stories of affected workers, attorneys, faith leaders (including an ELCA pastor and a Luther College affiliate) and many others, the viewer gains a sense of the injustices that the immigrants endured. They suffered from poverty and hunger in their home countries, forcing them to leave their homes to find work. Their workplace illegally employed children and enforced long hours with low pay. They endured dangerous conditions and abuse from their supervisors. Then they were charged as criminals, stripped of their human rights, forced to go months without pay and finally torn away from their families and deported back to poverty and hunger.

I highly recommend watching abUSed to learn more about the reality of immigration policy in this country. It could even be used as a great Bible study or education piece in a congregation setting.

As Christians, I believe we need to explore this topic. How did we used to be “foreigners”? How is God calling us to respond in our congregation, our community, our country and around the world? What is God’s vision of hospitality? I’d love to hear from you!

God bless,
Karen

ELCA Churchwide Assembly!

Today is a pivotal day in the life of the ELCA Malaria Campaign. The 2011 ELCA Churchwide Assembly opens today! One of the first orders of business for voting members will be to determine whether the ELCA Malaria Campaign, which until now has been in the pilot phase, should be rolled out to the whole church. We’re hoping for an overwhelming– maybe even unanimous– vote in favor of the Campaign.

We’re so excited to offer the ELCA a campaign that unites us to look outward…
A campaign that bridges the gap between continents and finds us hand-in-hand with our African companions…
A campaign that builds on the health infrastructures of our companions and takes them to new levels…
A campaign that  allows us to do God’s work with our hands in a very concrete way.

This would be the first major campaign of its kind in the ELCA.

Here are some places where you can find the latest on the ELCA Malaria Campaign and the action of the Churchwide Assembly:

1.) The ELCA Web site: www.elca.org (make sure to watch the live- stream of Churchwide Assembly Plenary Session #2 tonight!)
2.) The Living Lutheran Web site: www.livinglutheran.org
3.) The ELCA Malaria Campaign Web site will receive a facelift this week:www.elca.org/malaria
4.) The new ELCA Good Gifts catalog will have a section about malaria:www.elca.org/GoodGifts (new catalog coming soon)
5.) The Hunger Resource packet that is sent to each ELCA congregation in August will include ELCA Malaria Campaign materials.

Top Ten Things You Should Know about the Deal to Raise the Debt Ceiling, How It Relates to Hunger, and Ways You Can Get Involved

(posted by Audrey Riley for Karen Ward, intern)

(source: www.bread.org/hunger/budget)

10. President Obama and congressional leaders reached a deal to raise the debt ceiling and reduce the deficit by at least $2.1 trillion over 10 years in two parts.

9. This plan will last through early 2013, so we don’t have to go through this ordeal again within a few months, as proposed in previous versions of the plan.

8. The deal creates a bipartisan, bicameral (with members from both parties and both legislative chambers) “super committee” that must report by late November. This committee must make specific recommendations to reduce the deficit by an additional $1.5 trillion over 10 years.

7. The committee’s recommendations are to receive special procedural treatment in Congress, requiring a simple up-or-down vote by Christmas. The committee is directed to look at everything, including revenues, entitlement reforms, and defense spending.

6. The bill caps discretionary spending, leading to $840 billion in cuts over 10 years. For the first two years, there are different caps for security and non-security spending.

Security in this case includes foreign assistance (including poverty-focused development) along with defense, homeland security and other areas.

5. Discretionary programs important to people suffering from poverty are at risk of deep cuts. Programs include international food aid, poverty-focused development assistance, WIC, job-training programs, Head Start and Hunger Free Communities.

4. Because foreign assistance is considered security spending, it could be at risk of even deeper cuts should Congress attempt to protect defense spending over foreign assistance.

3. The initial cuts and caps do not affect mandatory spending. The super committee will be tasked with mandatory spending cuts and reforms. Changes to entitlement programs could have devastating consequences for SNAP (formerly known as food stamps), unemployment insurance, Medicaid and other programs.

2. If the super committee fails to produce recommendations totaling at least $1.2 trillion, automatic across-the-board cuts would be triggered every year for 9 years, starting in 2013. Cuts would be split 50/50 between defense and non-defense spending. Means-tested entitlement programs would be exempt from these cuts.

1. Means–tested entitlement programs that are exempted include SNAP, Medicaid and others. While means-tested entitlement programs are protected, all other vital programs, including poverty-focused development assistance and WIC, will be open to deep cuts.

Take action! Call your members of Congress at 1-800-826-3688 to make sure they are considering the safety and livelihood of those suffering from hunger and poverty in our country. Write a letter to the editor to get the word out! Together we can make a difference for millions of people in this country and around the world.

God bless,
Karen

Thank you, Calvary Lutheran Church in Edina!

Dorothy Fergus wrote us this inspiring note:

“Just a quick note to let you folks know about our tiny little Sunday school in Edina, Minnesota and what they have been doing this past year.

On Rally Day in September, the 24 children of our small Sunday school took on a new mission project for the year – to raise money for the ELCA Malaria Campaign.

We put together a large bulletin board complete with story book about malaria, a real mosquito net, a world map and pins to hang up mini-nets.  For every $10.00 that we received, the children were invited to attach one mini-net to the board.  Thoughout the year we learned more about malaria and how it can be devistating for whole families.

By Mother’s Day, we had taken in $804.72 and had pinned 80 mini-mosquito nets to the map.  Here is a photo of some of our students in front of the board the Sunday following our VBS program.  The kids, some still wearing their teeshirts, are celebrating their accomplished goal.”

Thank you, Calvary Sunday School!

Summer Intern’s Final Thoughts (from the office at least)

It’s amazing for me to read over the first blog post I wrote as the World Hunger summer intern only two months ago. It’s also surreal to be sitting in my cubicle during my last week working at the Lutheran Center. It all went so fast, yet it was packed with so much personal growth, education and discernment that it felt much longer than one summer. Many young adults hope for a summer packed with sunshine, good friends, good times and perhaps a little romance. I feel I was privileged to experience all of these (just got my dad’s attention), but maybe differently than most would imagine.
The first few goals are what anyone would expect. Despite working in an office for the summer, I still managed to get outside and enjoy the sights and various cultures of Chicago and my tan lines are living proof of those experiences. Also I have become friends with the other interns working with me this summer and we’ve shared some great memories in and around the Windy City.
My “summer romance,” however, took an unexpected form. I ended up falling in love with my longtime good friend . . . the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Is that weird, saying that I fell in love with my denomination? Let me clarify.
First and foremost, I am a Christian. I’ve devoted my life to picking up my cross and following Christ. My own personal discernment has led me to sense a call to ordained ministry, but everyone has their own call to discern. Secondly, while I was born into the Episcopal church, I’ve grown up in an ELCA congregation. While my heritage is not deeply rooted in the Lutheran church, I feel that my family–my mom, my dad and I–is deeply rooted in our home congregation. Through thick and thin, Trinity Lutheran Church has been a major part of our lives, and the values we’ve learned there have guided our daily lives.
But it took me years of growth and engagement to really get a handle on what the ELCA is all about. Through various Theological Education with Youth programs I learned more about the wide range of Lutheran Social Services around the country—dealing with homelessness, hunger, social justice, advocacy, education and the list goes on and on. However, it wasn’t until this summer, working at the Lutheran Center, that I really began to understand what the ELCA stands for. I’ve had the privilege of having one-on-one meetings with various members of the church-wide staff. I’ve discussed their passions and their hopes and concerns for the future of the church. All of these discussions have lead to my acknowledgment that I’m proud to be Lutheran and I love serving within a Lutheran context.
I love that we’re engaged in the world through mission development, through hunger appeals, environmental sustainability practices, and through disaster relief both here and abroad. I love that our mission work is grounded in the theology of accompaniment, where working side by side with people around the world is the key and relationships are of great value. I love that we’re deeply committed to interfaith and ecumenical dialogue and that we are engaged in public policy through our social statements. I love that we value diversity and are striving to create a more diverse church full of various experiences and ideas. I love that we have over 300 new mission starts that are working to becoming new ELCA congregations and that we have over 10,000 existing congregations that have the potential to be continually moving and growing with the Spirit. I love that we are passionate about diving into scripture and creating deep theological discussion and discernment. I love our Lutheran understanding that we have been freed by Christ to serve, whatever form that may take. Lastly, I love that all of this work is grounded in the idea that this is not our doing: God’s work. Our hands.
I’ve fallen deep and I’ve fallen hard. I’m excited to see where God leads me next and how I can continue to deepen my engagement with the church. Let me know what you love and what you’re passionate about in your faith life! I’d love to hear from you!

P.S. Look out for future posts from me!

God bless,

Karen