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African
Church Leaders Admit, 'We Have Been Reluctant to Speak Openly
about HIV/AIDS'
Plus:
Missouri monk shooting, Gracia Burnham tips authorities on Abu
Sayyaf, and other stories from online sources around the world.
Compiled by
Todd Hertz and Ted Olsen
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posted
06/11/2002
Christianity Today,
Week of
June 10
African religious leaders
admit shortcomings in AIDS fight
Yesterday was the first day of Nairobi's World Conference on
Religion and Peace, in which more than 150 Roman Catholic,
Ethiopian Orthodox, Protestant, Muslim, and Hindu religious
leaders gathered from 30 African countries to discuss
the church's role in combating
AIDS.
The leaders admitted that they have remained
too silent and passive as the epidemic swept through their
countries and congregations. Leaders said they dragged their
feet in education against AIDS and, despite their grassroots
networks, had failed to support government in combating the
disease.
The group voiced the church's shortcomings in
a declaration of principles:
We have been reluctant to speak openly about HIV/AIDS and have
thus at times contributed to the silence and stigma that
surround the disease. We have allowed fear and denial to prevent
us from getting good information and education about HIV/AIDS
and, in turn, sharing that information with the members of our
conference.
The religious leaders vowed new activism in
the fight against AIDS and to show compassion to victims,
especially to AIDS orphans. "Some leaders are still afraid of
them," the Rev. Jane Nuthu, told The New
York Times. "They don't want to touch them."
The religious leaders also remained firm in
their beliefs that
abstinence, not contraception
education, is the best means to fight HIV and
AIDS.
"We started with condoms and have been
flooded with condoms, and HIV is still spreading," Roman
Catholic Archbishop John Onaiyekan told the Associated Press.
"We believe it is possible for children to control themselves.
We are teaching them that they are not animals, and they can
control themselves."
A 71-year-old man armed with an AK-47 assault rifle and a
sawed-off .22-caliber rifle opened fire inside Missouri's
Conception Abbey
yesterday morning. Before committing suicide, Lloyd Robert
Jeffress
killed two monks and seriously
wounded two others.
Killed in the attack were Brother Damian
Larson, 64, and the Rev. Philip Schuster, 85. The Rev. Kenneth
Reichert, 68, and the Rev. Norbert Schappler, 76, were wounded.
The attack appears to be a
random shooting.
The abbot of the Conception Abbey, Rev. Gregory Polan, said in a
press conference that the man was a "total stranger. We have not
found anything to connect this man to us."
"Statements made by Gracia Burnham, the only hostage to survive
Friday's rescue attempt, and information gleaned from letters
written by her husband and recovered at the site, present a more
desperate picture of the Abu Sayyaf's circumstances than many
had expected," The Washington Post" reports today. While 100 of the Muslim guerrillas held the
missionary couple a year ago, their numbers had dwindled to 14
by the rescue. "Only 10 of the rebels had weapons, and nearly
half of the 14 were teenagers." Subtract those killed in the
Friday firefight and you have 10 left with six guns. Subtract
the
capture today of 19-year-old
Basher Ordonez, who was wounded in the Friday's
battle, and you have nine members. And Ordonez says there's only
seven. They're low on food and supplies and have no support on
the island of Mindanao where they're believed to remain.
"Abu Sabaya's world is getting smaller and
smaller every hour of the day," Major General Glicerio Sua, who
commands the operations against the guerillas, told the
Philippine Inquirer.
"They're definitely on the run, and the
military is at the point now that they can just shoot without
worrying about hitting hostages," missionary Jodi Crane told the
Post after meeting with Gracia.
"But they've got a pretty big job cut out for them. It's easy
for the Abu Sayyaf to drop the guns, change clothes and blend in
with the farmers."
Also notable in the
Post story is one unnamed Philippine official's remark
that the presence of the U.S. military in the country has
staunched collusion between corrupt military officers and the
Abu Sayyaf. "Something seems to have changed," the official
said. "It looks like the U.S. presence has brought in more
integrity."
Meanwhile, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
is busy defending the military's rescue attempt Friday. At a
wake for slain hostage Ediborah
Yap, Agence France-Presse reports, the president
"was
given the cold shoulder
… by grieving residents." Priest Cirilo Nacorda, for former Abu
Sayyaf hostage, was one of the critics. "How can you call it
successful? What is their measure? It took more than a year, and
then this," he said, pointing at Yap's coffin.
President Arroyo is standing firm. "Our
military commanders
made the right call,"
she told a news conference yesterday. "They made the correct
call." She criticized media who called the rescue attempt "a
botched job."
The U.S. government is now adding morale
support to the weapons and military trainers it already sent to
the country. "The heroes are the hostages, the three of them—the
two who died and the one who survived—and the AFP, particularly
the Scout Rangers," Ambassador Francis Ricciardone said. "No one
should try to suggest that the rescue was bungled or botched in
any way;
these guys are heroes,
they are brave and skillful. And the criminals are the Abu
Sayyaf."
A study released yesterday finds that the government does
discriminate against faith-based programs in the selection of
groups to fund. Those groups that are funded, however, do not
experience interference from the government or a loss of
religious freedom.
"Working
Faith" looks specifically at welfare-to-work
programs in Los Angeles, Dallas, Chicago, and Philadelphia. The
study, commissioned by the Manhattan Institute and the
University of Pennsylvania's Center for Research on Religion and
Urban Civil Society, considers 500 welfare-to-work programs and
analyzes how the faith-based organizations differ from their
government-run, for-profit, or secular non-profit counterparts.
Other findings include:
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The Bush
administration's faith-based initiative is merely an extension
of current practice. Fifty percent of all faith-based
welfare-to-work programs receive federal funds. These monies
make up 50 percent of budgets of less-religious groups and 30
percent of those with deeper integration of religious elements
into their work.
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There is
evidence of discrimination against faith-based groups in the
disbursement of funds. For instance, 21 percent of all
faith-based programs who applied for funding were turned down
compared to a 7 percent ratio for secular nonprofits.
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Only
three out of 60 faith-based programs reported reducing
religious practices as a result of receiving federal funds.
However, nearly 40 percent of programs have an internal policy
not to apply for federal funds because of such fears.
John DiIulio, former head of the White House
Office for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives and now with
the Manhattan Institute, told The Washington Post that the study might be the best data yet collected on
faith-based organizations.
Desmond Tutu criticizes
Canterbury selection process
The Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey will resign his post
in October. Within the next few months, his successor will be
chosen by Prime Minister Tony Blair because the Church of
England is an established state church.
Although not obligated to take the church's
recommendations, the Crown Appointments Commission provides the
prime minister with two candidates to consider. The Queen of
England ratifies the decision.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu yesterday called the
process "arcane" and is asking the Church of England to cut the
state's "apron
strings" and select its own leader.
Tutu also called for the selection process to
be widened beyond England to open the possibility of an African
or Asian Archbishop of Canterbury. However, Tutu is currently
backing the
Archbishop of Wales Rowan
Williams for the job. "For my money the
Archbishop of Wales
really towers head and shoulders
above any of the other people," Tutu said yesterday.
More articles
Conflict in the holy land:
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Israeli army reportedly blew
up church | Local officials in the village of
Aboud, near Ramallah, say an ancient church called Santa
Barbara was destroyed on Friday night (Reuters)
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How to bless Israel
| Why do we evangelicals think support for Israel is the main
thing on God's list of priorities? (Richard Mouw, Beliefnet)
Christian merchandise:
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Jesus statues got game
| Inspirational figurines depict Christ as sports guru for
kids (San Francisco Chronicle)
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Are You Laughing With Me,
Jesus? | Salt and pepper shakers resembling nun
dolls, key chains with miniature Bibles, Jesus action figures
and Virgin Mary tank tops are crowding retail shelves —
promoted by merchants who subscribe to the credo that one
person's object of devotion may be another's kitsch. (The
New York Times)
Other stories of interest:
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Archbishop warns of resurgent
bigotry | The trend towards secularism which
had defined recent western history was now in retreat before
resurgent religious bigotry and could also create a society
whose priorities were "making the trains run on time—whether
they are going to Eden or Auschwitz", according to the
Archbishop of Wales. (The Guardian,
London)
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My wondrous cross
| John Newbury explains why he wears a cross. (The
Guardian, London)
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