Over long career, United Methodist remains U.N. booster
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Mia Adjali is retiring after serving 46 years
in the United Nations office of the Women's Division of the United
Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
A UMNS photo by John Goodwin.
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By Linda Bloom*
Jan. 3, 2007 | NEW YORK (UMNS)
When Mia Adjali's college class decided to put on a "mock" United
Nations - with Adjali as secretary-general - she attended a weeklong
Methodist Student Christian Citizenship Seminar as preparation.
That experience became a turning point, leading to a lifelong career
relating to the United Nations. On Dec. 31, she retired after serving 46
years in the U.N. office of the Women's Division, United Methodist
Board of Global Ministries.
"Mia Adjali has probably known more of the international community
over a longer period of time than any living American," declared Betty
Thompson, another longtime employee of the Board of Global Ministries.
"From her post at 777 U.N. Plaza, she has been a vibrant link between
the Christian community and the United Nations," she added. "Through
her office, literally thousands of Americans have come to visit the U.N.
and participated in seminars. Her passionate dedication to peace and
justice, her gift for friendship and her mission heritage uniquely
equipped her for this post."
Although she has officially retired, Adjali is not yet leaving her
diplomatic stomping grounds on the east side of Manhattan. In July, she
was elected vice president of the World Federation of Methodist and
Uniting Women during that organization's 11th assembly in Jeju, South
Korea.
As vice president, she will oversee the federation's U.N. program and studies program.
Adjali had hosted the federation's officers when they met in New York a
few years ago. "That's when the federation got the idea to concentrate
on the millennium goals of the United Nations," she explained.
She also has been asked by the Women's Division to write a history of
the United Methodist-owned Church Center for the United Nations and
assist with resolutions for the 2008 General Conference, the
denomination's top legislative body.
Like the United Methodist Boards of Global Ministries and Church and
Society, the World Federation of Methodist and Uniting Women has
consultative status with the United Nations' economic and social
council, which allows access to all U.N. meetings.
The role of such nongovernmental organizations in the international
body is so important that they are part of the U.N. charter. "It wasn't
just the governments that were discussing the founding of such an
organization," Adjali explained. "The churches had an important role."
Acting as "megaphones" for the voices of people around the world, "NGOs,
in many ways, are the ones that lift up the issues and remind
governments of issues they need to be concerned about," she pointed out.
International background
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Mia Adjali recounts some of her
experiences during more than four decades working for the denomination. A
UMNS photo by John Goodwin.
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Adjali's own childhood reflected Methodist involvement in the world at
large. Her parents, Mary and Hans Hansen (the family name was later
changed to Aurbakken), were missionaries with the Methodist Board of
Missions. After being trapped in Algeria during World War II, Adjali
remembers tasting chocolate for the first time when the family finally
gained passage in 1945 on a Norwegian banana boat.
After a brief stay in their homeland of Norway, her parents took a
sabbatical leave at Hartford Seminary in Connecticut. There, her mother
died from complications of a gall bladder operation when Adjali was 7
years old.
Eventually, her father remarried a family friend and they returned to
Algeria, where Adjali finished primary school. She spent three years at
a school in France before finishing high school in Hartford and then
attending Millsaps College in Jackson, Miss.
Dick Celeste, a Yale student who later became the governor of Ohio,
was in charge of the Christian Citizenship Seminar in 1959, organized by
the Methodist Student Movement. The seminar brought students to the
United Nations to learn about international issues and then to
Washington D.C. to meet with legislators.
After that experience, a professor encouraged Adjali to change her
major from sociology to international relations, and she took every
course that Millsaps offered on the subject. Upon graduation in 1960,
Herman Will of the Methodist Commission on World Peace -a predecessor
agency of the Board of Church and Society - recommended her for a job
with the U.N. office.
Working for rights
Adjali spent five years working as a seminar designer before becoming
a staff executive with the Women's Division. In the early 1960s, the
Methodists built the 12-story Church Center for the United Nations,
directly across from the United Nations.
Margaret Bender, who led the office then, was an enthusiastic
advocate of decolonization in Africa, according to Adjali, and the
center's staff assisted those petitioning the United Nations from
various liberation and human rights movements by providing space with
desks, telephones, typewriters and access to copying machines.
Many of those leaders later became prime ministers, presidents
and Nobel Prize winners. "We believed in the rights of people to
represent their concerns and issues," Adjali explained.
An exciting moment involving what was then Southern Rhodesia (now
Zimbabwe) occurred in 1980. "Just before independence … the two parties
were to make a joint presentation at the Security Council," she
recalled. "They sent their speechwriters to our office."
Adjali's assistant, Jennifer Washington, typed up the speeches,
paragraph by paragraph, and they ran off enough copies for the Security
Council members and other interested parties. Moments like that, she
said, allow the Women's Division's U.N. office to feel "we really are
giving a service here that we are privileged to give."
Life changes
Even her personal life has been influenced by her career. She met her
husband, Boubaker Adjali, while in Algiers in 1966 to plan a Women's
Division trip. "We were engaged in five days," she remembered.
They married in 1967 and planned to move to Algeria, but for
political reasons her husband was unable to do so. Boubaker Adjali, a
filmmaker and journalist, also eventually became an adviser to two
presidents of the U.N. General Assembly. Their son, Madani, will be 25
years old on Feb. 1.
"Boubaker really knows the U.N. inside and out and has worked with the African diplomats," Mia said.
Adjali does not know the new U.N. secretary general - Ban Ki-moon of
South Korea succeeded Kofi Annan on Jan. 1 - but said she's heard he is a
good manager. "They expect a number of changes in terms of management
of the U.N.," she added.
Not surprisingly, she remains a staunch defender of the United
Nations and believes much of the criticism surrounding its work is "a
reflection of the incredible amount of misinformation about the U.N. or
lack of information."
In Adjali's opinion, no other mechanism exists than this
international body "for thinking and reflecting" on issues such as
eradicating poverty, protecting the environment, improving health and
offering access to housing and education.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Resources
Women's Division
Church and Society: U.N.
United Nations
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