Sea To Sea Cyclist Reaches First Goal

May 5th, 2008

Jim BeezholdAs we previously reported, Jim Beezhold, a 72-year- old retired teacher, is preparing to bicycle 3,750 miles across North America next summer hoping to raise more than $1.5 million to help the world’s poor! Jim is one of 211 riders, ranging in age from 18 to 76, currently registered to participate in what is likely to be the largest group of cyclists to ever cross North America! The Sea to Sea 2008 Bike Tour begins June 28 in Seattle, Wash., and ends nine weeks later in Jersey City, NJ on August 30. For his part, Jim hopes to raise at least $10,000.
Jim has reported that he has acheived his goal of raising $10,000! That won’t stop Jim from raising more and going beyond his goal though! A fundraiser is being planned by his home church on May 31st. See our events calendar for details and watch this site for more news as Jim begins his coast to coast cycle ride raising awareness about the Millennium Development Goals and raising money for the world’s poorest.

Local Representatives Fail to Support Debt Cancellation

May 5th, 2008

Voices of local Congregations Ignored by Three Republican Congressmen who voted “No” Despite Bipartisan Support in Congress By Jean O’Leary

Leaders of churches, development agencies, and civil rights, labor, and human rights groups praised the passage by the U.S. House of Representatives by a vote 285-132 of the Jubilee Act (2634). The legislation calls the U.S. Treasury Department to negotiate a multilateral agreement for debt cancellation for up to 24 additional poor countries that need cancellation to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Jubilee USA Network, which includes 20 Jubilee Congregations from a variety of churches and faith communities in San Diego County, is an alliance of 80 national organizations that has been leading the advocacy for the legislation. “We commend the US Congress for its bold step in passing the Jubilee Act and listening to the people of the impoverished nations who have borne the burden of unjust debt for far too long,” said Rev. Bill Harman, a retired Encinitas pastor and member of the Board of Jubilee USA Network. “We hope that House passage will inspire the US Senate to move quickly to also pass the Jubilee Act and send it to the President for immediate action.”

Representatives Bilbray, Issa, and Hunter all received several delegations and messages of support for the Jubilee Act over the past months from local people of faith. Despite verbal and some written expressions of probable support for the act, after receiving thousands of written appeals from their constituents, they all failed to join Representatives Filner and Davis in voting “yes.”

WHY? We await replies from each of them soon. We hope their replies will reflect a reasoned response based on their faith perspectives and moral values and not on purely political considerations.

Can Representatives Issa and Hunter explain to us from their faith and moral values perspective their failure to join their fellow 69 republicans who publicly project “compassionate conservativism” and the importance of faith in the shaping of public policy as well as democrats like Representatives Davis and Filner to vote for this piece of legislation?
We await their replies.

When is Charity Not a Good Thing? Part Two

May 5th, 2008

Wahu KaaraInspired by a meeting with Wahu Kaara.
Last month we wrote about going beyond charity and acting to see that justice is done. This requires understanding of the root causes of poverty and injustice, and then acting to address those root causes. I recently had the privilege of hearing Wahu Kaara speak. Wahu Kaara is an extremely dynamic, knowledgeable Kenyan woman. Since retiring as a teacher she has been a Kenyan presidential candidate, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, a spokesperson for Jubilee and ecumenical coordinator for the Millennium Development Goals among many other things. She speaks all around the world on global social justice issues, but more than that she “walks the talk”. This lady who is called on for her knowledge and expertise around the world chooses to live modestly with her family in her home village in a home without electricity and without running water.

I was fortunate enough to have a few minutes to speak with her and asked her what she felt Americans could best do in response to extreme poverty. Her answer was not surprising to me as it reflected the answers of most people from the global south I have met. She told me; “We do not want your charity or your sympathy. We want you to speak out for us, and with us, to learn about us and from us.” She pointed out that those in poverty in the global south have much to give us, in terms of spiritual depth and trust in God. We have much to give them because of the material and political power and stability we enjoy. In other words she would like us to enter into relationship with her and her people; a partnership of mutual respect not of donor and dependent. She emphasized that climate change was a significant root cause of poverty and had to be addressed.

Ways that we can speak out are varied but include writing and visiting our representatives in support of development aid, and in support of fulfilling our obligations to the Millennium Development Goals that address the root causes of poverty, this would include fairer trade policies (such as farm subsidies included in the farm bill,) supporting the Education for all Act and relief of crippling international debt.

We can tell our friends and acquaintances at church about the desires and goals of this humble yet very wise Kenyan lady. We are to speak out about poverty, inequality and climate change. This was perhaps the most surprising impression from her talk: climate change and poverty are inextricably linked and must be addressed as a root cause of poverty.

may we suggest you get to know someone from the global south or someone who is or has lived in poverty. Perhaps you might even be able to visit the global south and build a relationship with a community there. Not as someone going to hand out resources, and solve other people’s problems before you even get to know them, but as a friend willing to learn about them, their dreams and goals and the resources they have to work with. Then work together to reach the goals you set together.
So, wake up to poverty, speak up about poverty and join hands with those living in poverty as equal partners in the battle to overcome poverty.

When is Charity Not a Good Thing?

March 24th, 2008

Charity alone is not enough.

For a group such as ours, claiming to have compassion for the poor it may seem like a strange thing to knock charitable efforts. That’s most definitely not what this article intends to do. But it is the focus of this group to urge our members and others to go beyond charity or mercy and do justice. To do justice we must examine the systemic causes of poverty and examine how our own lives are linked to the systemic causes of poverty. We must then use whatever tools we have been blessed with to change the systemic causes of poverty, (such as poor health education and provision, poor hygiene, lack of education, lack of accessible clean water, gender inequality, unfair trade practices, lack of entrepreneurial opportunity, and unsustainable farming practices.)

Working for justice is far less rewarding than charity. There are no quick fixes,and the most common reason for quitting is discouragement. But we do not have a choice. God has clearly stated that He requires us to not only have mercy, but to do justice (Micah 6:8) Without working for justice the systemic causes of poverty will continue to exist, and the need for charity endless.

So, can charity be a bad thing? Only when it gets in the way of doing justice. When we become so focused on our charitable efforts that we have no time or energy left for advocating for change to the system that creates poverty. When charity becomes the only element in the equation then it is a problem. When a charitable act makes you feel like you’ve ‘done your part” and have no need to do anything further, then charity is a bad thing.

So we urge you to examine the way you use your time and energy. Is your equation balanced? Or is your commitment to charity an obstacle to your doing justice?

One way, and a very simple way, in which some people do justice, is to use their blessings (literacy, democracy,etc) to write letters of concern and encouragement to our elected representatives. We can express concern about issues that cause systemic poverty and encourage action on our behalf in support of poverty focused aid. This year, the advocacy group, Bread for the World is urging letters to representatives and senators in support of the Global Poverty Act. It takes about 5 minutes to write a letter and costs only 41c. for the stamp. This is not much more time than it takes to write a check for your favorite charity and certainly cheaper. Why not try doing justice in this way? Go to the Bread site for more information and sample letters.
If you think you are too busy or letter writing is not effective, watch this!

“New Face of Hunger”

February 28th, 2008

The United Nations warned yesterday that it no longer has enough money to keep global malnutrition at bay this year in the face of a dramatic upward surge in world commodity prices, which have created a “new face of hunger”.

“We will have a problem in coming months,” said Josette Sheeran, the head of the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP). “We will have a significant gap if commodity prices remain this high, and we will need an extra half billion dollars just to meet existing assessed needs.”

With voluntary contributions from the world’s wealthy nations, the WFP feeds 73 million people in 78 countries, less than a 10th of the total number of the world’s undernourished. Its agreed budget for 2008 was $2.9bn (£1.5bn). But with annual food price increases around the world of up to 40% and dramatic hikes in fuel costs, that budget is no longer enough even to maintain current food deliveries.

The shortfall is all the more worrying as it comes at a time when populations, many in urban areas, who had thought themselves secure in their food supply are now unable to afford basic foodstuffs. Afghanistan has recently added an extra 2.5 million people to the number it says are at risk of malnutrition

“This is the new face of hunger,” Sheeran said. “There is food on shelves but people are priced out of the market. There is vulnerability in urban areas we have not seen before. There are food riots in countries where we have not seen them before.”

Read the full report here

Check out Bread’s new video

February 15th, 2008

This is a 60 second video from Bread for the World and it’s really worthwhile and funny into the bargain. View it here

How We Fight Poverty

February 8th, 2008

In an article in Christianity Today, it was noted that Ban Ki-Moon was urging Christians to put their power behing the Milennium Development Goals. That’s something we really want to encourage;

Ban Ki-Moon, the secretary general of the United Nations and one of the world’s most influential leaders, did the unimaginable a few weeks ago: He met with a diverse group of evangelicals near Washington, D.C., and asked for help from the church.

Speaking on behalf of 192 nations that committed themselves to cutting global poverty in half by 2015, Ban told evangelicals, “We cannot do it alone. We need good allies such as you. We need … the faith community to help be a voice to the voiceless people. Your engagement can push governments to push through on their commitments. Do not underestimate your power. With faith and the will, we can make a difference.”

Read the full article

Malaria. Anti-Malaria Efforts Yield New Success

February 2nd, 2008

“Widespread use of insecticide-treated mosquito nets and state-of-the-art drugs has succeeded in cutting malaria deaths in half in two countries most heavily affected by the disease, the World Health Organization is reporting today.” Nets and New Drug Make Inroads Against Malaria “The report was one of the most hopeful signs in the long battle against a disease that is estimated to kill a million children a year in poor tropical countries.”

A high school senior vows to fight poverty

January 31st, 2008

One, Mississippi. Two, Mississippi. Three, Mississippi. Gone.
Counting off three seconds. It’s so simple.
One, alligator. Two, alligator. Three, alligator. Over.
Many of us don’t think about how significant three seconds can be. It’s a very short period of time, barely enough to make the last basket of a game, or making just enough difference to allow us to win first place instead of second in a race. However, over the past few years, I have learned that three seconds is much, much more than an easily measured, quickly passing moment.
Every three seconds, a child dies as a result of extreme poverty. Their lives are over, simply gone. That’s 16,000 children a day, accounting for more than half of the 30, 000 people who die each day because of extreme poverty. Extreme poverty is defined as living on less than one dollar a day. In a world where everything has a cost, essentials such as clean water, nourishing food, housing, education, medicine, clothing, electricity and transportation are not a possibility for the over one billion people who live in extreme poverty. Because of these needs which they cannot meet, more than eight million people living in extreme poverty die each year of starvation and disease. The majority of these deaths are preventable.
Some people see extreme poverty as a problem that is impossible to solve, something that the less fortunate people of the world will just have to deal with. I have been asked why I care about this issue- Don’t I think that it’s just too big a problem to be solved? Do I really think that my efforts to change what’s happening will make a difference? Why would I bother wasting my time on something that’s not even affecting me?
The issue of extreme poverty is important to me because I care about the well-being of those around the world. Another reason that I am passionate about this problem is because it can be solved. Experts, like the noted Jeffery Sachs, have agreed that now, for the first time in the history of mankind, it is possible to eradicate extreme poverty- and that this could be achieved by the year 2025.
At the G-8 summit in 2000, 189 world leaders adopted the Millennium Declaration. By doing so, these world leaders committed to “free all men, women and children from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty”. In order to achieve this goal, the Millennium Development Goals were drawn up. These eight goals aim to not only eradicate extreme poverty and hunger, but also to achieve universal primary education, promote gender equality and empower women, reduce child mortality, improve maternal health, combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases, ensure environmental sustainability, and develop a global partnership for development. These nations committed to pay 0.7% of their yearly Gross Domestic Product to fulfill the Millennium Development Goals. However, the majority of the committed nations, including the United States, have failed to pay this target amount.
I want to be a part of the generation which is remembered as having eliminated extreme poverty, not the generation which broke their promise. The time has come to end extreme poverty, and it can be done if we hold our leaders accountable and are responsible leaders ourselves. The issue of extreme poverty is important to me because I know that it can be ended, and I am willing to fight for the lives of those suffering from extreme poverty. Each day, 30,000 people die unnecessarily. One second, two seconds, three seconds, gone. Those three seconds do not have to signify the loss of lives. It’s time to get up and do something about poverty, because we can make a difference. Three, two, one… go.

submitted by Becca Kraus

One Person’s Response to End the Cycle of Poverty

January 31st, 2008

Jim BeezholdJim Beezhold, 72-year-old retired teacher is preparing to bicycle 3,750 miles across North America next summer hoping to raise more than $1.5 million to help the world’s poor.

Jim, a member of Christians Ending Poverty, is one of 177 riders ranging in age from 18 to 76, currently registered to participate in what is likely to be the largest group of cyclists to ever cross North America.The Sea to Sea 2008 Bike Tour begins June 28 in
Seattle, Wash., and ends nine weeks later in Jersey City, NJ on Aug. 30.
For his part Beezhold hopes to raise at least $10,000 The overall tour fund-raising target of $1.5 million will be used to fund initiatives that range from trying to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS in Africa to programs that help poor farmers improve their crop yields in Central
America. The tour will partner with non-governmental organizations already involved in offering assistance to the poor.
Contribute to Jim’s fundraising efforts

In addition to the fund-raising, a key goal of the tour is to increase awareness about poverty-related issues and encourage people to get involved in helping the poor, whether in their own community or half a world away.There will be at least 12 celebration rallies during the tour.

To pledge financial support in Beezhold’s name and help him reach his goal, call 1-888-272-2453 or visit www.SeatoSea.