August 2, 2006
By Linda Bloom
Human rights abuses remain a concern for faith
leaders in the Philippines, according to a United Methodist church
executive.
The Rev. Larry Pickens, chief executive of the
United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity, met with ecumenical
leaders, including those from the United Church of Christ and Pentecostal
churches, during a July 25-28 visit to Mindanao, Philippines.
The leaders shared with him the most recent list
of church workers, both laity and clergy, assassinated over the
past three years, Pickens said.
Support from international groups – including
United Methodist delegations, the World Council of Churches and
the Christian Conference of Asia – has been helpful in raising the
"visibility" of the human rights problem.
"The hope is that as church groups continue to
put the pressure on their governments to push the Philippine administration,
that will have a positive effect," he said.
In early January, Pickens was part of a United
Methodist delegation to the Philippines that called upon President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to take a more aggressive role to stop the
killing of clergy, laity, journalists and human rights workers who
help the poor.
Bishop John Hopkins, head of the delegation,
told a Jan. 6 news conference in Manila, "The killing must stop."
The delegation heard first-hand testimony from more than 20 victims
and surviving family members from many parts of the Philippines,
who described the pain and suffering exacted through murders targeting
religious and community workers.
"Our people are not armed," the bishop said at
the press conference. "They teach, provide medical care, counsel
and educate. We implore the government and military officials to
recognize the important work of those who seek to minister with
the poor and marginalized, and to distinguish their work as vital
and important to the country and its people."
Pickens also visited United Methodist and United
Church of Christ sites with Jonathan Ulanday, a director of the
Commission on Christian Unity and assistant to Bishop Leo Soriano,
based in Kidapawan City. Soriano was in South Korea at the time.
Pickens was impressed by the interfaith cooperation
on Mindanao. "The church is able to function in what is a very heavily
populated Muslim setting," he said. "I think there generally has
been peaceful co-existence between the Christian community and the
Muslim community."
Pickens said the Commission on Christian Unity
would investigate the possibility of an interfaith summit for the
denomination to consider ways in which the church can address interfaith
relationships in various countries and "be in dialogue and community
with brothers and sisters in other faith contexts."
United Methodist News Service
Linda Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based
in New York.
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