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By Melissa Hinnen*
3:00 P.M. EST Oct. 5, 2010 | NEW YORK (UMNS)
Mwanze Feza looks after her daughter Monga Vasiy, who is sick with
malaria, at the United Methodist Church's Shungu Health Center in
Kamina, Democratic Republic of
the Congo. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
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In a spirit of hope and partnership, Thomas Kemper has announced that
The United Methodist Church will contribute up to $28 million to the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, based on a
successful $75 million Imagine No Malaria campaign.
Kemper, who heads the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries,
spoke on behalf of the executive committee of the United Methodist
Global Health Initiative, of which Imagine No Malaria is a part. Imagine
No Malaria is an initiative of the people of The United Methodist
Church to raise funds to help eliminate malaria deaths in Africa by
2015.
The announcement was made at an Oct. 5 pledging ceremony of the Third
Voluntary Replenishment Conference of the Global Fund, chaired by U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Underscoring the urgency of fighting
malaria, Ban noted that during his address, about 62 lives would be lost
to a preventable, treatable disease.
He thanked the donors for making an investment that not only saves
lives but also will help “rewrite the opening chapter of our century.”
More than 40 public and private donors made three-year pledges in
partnership with the Global Fund.
Strengthening health systems
The United Methodist Church is the first faith-based organization to work in partnership with the Global Fund.
Kemper pointed out that the church has trusted networks in remote
parts of the world, beyond the reach of traditional health systems.
“Our financial commitment is an affirmation of efforts of faith-based
organizations in the fight against malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS,”
he said. “Churches exist in the smallest, most remote villages, where
there are no roads or electricity. They have presence and influence. We
are committed to encouraging these communities to support the Global
Fund and national efforts to fight the diseases of poverty.”
Kemper has seen firsthand communities that use churches as clinics
during the week and patients sitting in pews in a makeshift waiting
room. Communities in Africa are already joining the resources of faith
networks to bring healing and health. The partnership with the Global
Fund is expected to strengthen those resources.
The Global Fund is the world’s largest funding source for health
programs that fight HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. In 2008, the
Global Fund was responsible for almost 60 percent of the world funding
for anti-malaria programs covering 34 countries. That has led to saving
an estimated 750,000 lives.
The relationship between The United Methodist Church and the Global
Fund will be critical to fighting not only malaria but also other
diseases of poverty, including tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS, as well as the
stigma that often surrounds them, leaders said.
Grassroots strategies
Through the United Methodist Committee on Relief, The United
Methodist Church works with eight annual (regional) conferences to build
and strengthen health boards. The health boards provide leadership and
governance to hospitals, clinics and community health programs, and
offer systems of accountability and stewardship.
Kemper stressed that the commitment of the church affirms “the
importance of community- and faith-based health organizations and
advocates for their role in the fight against malaria, AIDS and TB.”
“I am convinced that strategies (need to be) translated to the local
level,” he said. “We want to make sure partners such as local churches,
mosques, temples, self-help groups and schools are involved in
meaningful ways in a country’s health coordination and service
delivery.”
UMCOR has been involved in addressing global health issues from a
community-based perspective throughout much of its 70-year history.
“United Methodists provide clinics, hospitals and community-based health
services without regard to race, religion or political creed,” Kemper
said. “This has been our calling and it is why we believe that support
for local health systems and infrastructures, especially in Africa, is
essential to the success of the Global Fund.”
The World Health Organization estimates that faith-based
organizations run 40 percent of the health infrastructure in Africa.
Kemper called on Global Fund sponsors and the donor community to
strengthen partnerships with those organizations effectively to fight
tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS and eliminate malaria deaths by 2015.
Gifts to Imagine No Malaria, Advance #3021190, support efforts to eliminate malaria deaths in Africa by 2015. Donations can be made online.
*Hinnen is the director of communications for the United Methodist Committee on Relief.
News media contact: Barbara Dunlap-Berg, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5489 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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