August 24, 2006 NEW YORK – Several
United Methodist leaders figure prominently in a powerful TV documentary, "Hunger
No More: Faces Behind the Facts," presented by the National Council of Churches.
The program takes an unflinching look at the persistent
problem of hunger in the 21st century and offers solutions. It is available to
NBC television network affiliates beginning Sept. 10. United
Methodists contributing their expertise in the program are the Rev. John McCullough,
executive director of Church World Service; George McGovern, former senator and
Democratic presidential candidate; Ken Horne, chief executive of the Society of
St. Andrew; June Kim, executive secretary for world hunger of the United Methodist
Committee on Relief; and the Rev. Bob Edgar, the NCC's chief executive. Most
Americans don't often ask where their next meal is coming from. But for millions
of Americans and nearly a billion people worldwide, such food insecurity is a
daily reality. The documentary approaches hunger from the perspective of faith,
declaring that hunger is more than a social issue. "It
is a moral issue that needs immediate resolution," explained Burton Buller, president
of Mennonite Media, producer of the program in collaboration with the NCC. "The
program brings to life the moral dimension of this thorny issue and offers up
a vision for a new day when hunger is eradicated from the face of the earth,"
he said. The one-hour, closed-captioned special, presented
by the NCC in partnership with the Interfaith Broadcasting Commission, will be
telecast by NBC affiliates nationwide beginning Sunday, Sept. 10. Interested viewers
should call their NBC station and ask when the program will be broadcast locally.
A study guide for the program or more information is
available online at http://www.councilofchurches.org/hunger/.
The TV special is being produced as part of the NCC's
commitment "to address significant issues of faith and public policy and to pursue
concrete solutions to the persistent challenge of poverty in a time of great wealth
and capability in our society," Edgar said. In addition
to Mennonite Media, the NCC's partners for this production are the United Methodist
Committee on Relief, the World Hunger Program of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America, the Society of St. Andrew and Church World Service, with cooperation
from Bread for the World and United Methodist Communications. United
Methodist News Service Information for this story was provided by the National
Council of Churches. |