Church World Service Moves New Africa Initiative
Forward
November 5, 2002
NEW YORK Church World Service is moving forward plans for a new
Africa Initiative, through which CWS and its partners will seek to bring
increased attention and resources to the struggles faced by the majority
of Africans.
The CWS Africa Initiative will extend over at least five years and aims
to target new resources for maximum impact on a few significant issues.
It will work with African national councils of churches and other partners
to build, improve and expand their humanitarian services, institutions
and leadership. The Africa Initiative will target three particularly vulnerable
populations: 1) children; 2) people living with HIV/AIDS, and 3) uprooted
peoples, including refugees, migrants and internally displaced persons.
It will focus on three root causes of hunger and poverty affecting these
vulnerable groups: 1) violence, conflict, peace and reconciliation; 2)
water, health and food security, and 3) globalization and poverty reduction.
And it will give specific and intentional attention to the needs and rights
of African women and girls, who long have faced discrimination and violence.
One component of the Africa Initiative that is generating particular
interest is the concept of schools as "Safe Zones." Executive
Director John L. McCullough said, "We would seek to promote schools
as safe zones where children could be secure from violence, receive one
hot meal a day, and pursue education."
The Africa Initiative in general, and the "Safe Zones" component
in particular, also will seek to engage corporations, especially those
that have been taking resources from the continent. "We will encourage
them to reinvest in communities there," McCullough said. "The
first priority for reinvestment should be the schools."
The Africa Initiative also sets out to "strengthen the voice of
our partners in the international arena," said Kirsten Laursen, an
Episcopalian who serves as CWS Deputy Director for Programs. "CWS
has the unique opportunity to facilitate representation of our partners'
concerns," on, for example, the New Economic Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD), a major 21st century initiative for engaging the
international community in partnership with Africa for Africa's development.
The CWS Board of Directors reviewed the evolving initiative at its fall
meeting, held October 22-23 in South Bend, Indiana, and gave its unanimous
support. Formal launch of the Africa Initiative is set for January 2004.
Throughout 2003, CWS will work to enlist U.S. denominational support and
will hold a series of follow-up planning meetings with African church
leaders.
CWS is the $70 million a year, global humanitarian agency of the 36
Protestant, Orthodox and Anglican member denominations of the (U.S.) National
Council of Churches, and works in more than 80 countries. CWS has broad
U.S. grassroots support particularly through its nearly 2,000 annual
CROP WALKS, which last year raised more than $17 million to fight hunger
in the United States and around the world.
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