What a world, eh? People being laid off, shops shutting up shop,
the air thick with the crunch of bankruptcy. Even the Christmas trees are looking
smaller and sadder this year. But if it’s bad here in the north it’s worse in
the south. When a government has to break the budget bad news into bite-size
chunks and feed it to the public in instalments, you know things are bad, bad, bad.
And yet out of the deepest pain comes a generosity of
spirit. It shows in politics:
ex-combatants, those who have suffered most, find a way of working together for
the future of all. It shows again when there’s a natural disaster: the Irish
people respond with a built-in generosity – and of course it’s those who have
least who give most readily.
But tight as our family budget may be, we’re in economic clover compared to much of the
world. Take the US, that land of plenty: more than a million of its children go
to bed hungry every night. In the developing world every year, fifteen million
children die from malnutrition and almost a billion people endure chronic
hunger. They don’t die or suffer because there’s been a drought or some other
disaster. They die because a political and economic system is in place which
keeps the world lop-sided. In the developed world we eat so much, our overweight
children have become a problem; in the developing world, millions scavenge for a
crust and children’s bellies bloat as they sicken and die.
There are three ways you can react to these horrifying
facts. You can throw up your hands and admit defeat. You can work to change the
system. Or you can put your hand in your pocket and change life for at least
one family.
A couple of weeks ago I was privileged (I know, I know, but
it’s the only word) to be in Belfast
City Hall at a Trocaire event organized under the auspices of our excellent young
Belfast mayor Niall O Donnghaile
(yes, Ruthie, you heard me - EXCELLENT). He’s madeTrocaire one of the
official charities for his term in office, and at the event the audience heard
first-hand accounts of that organisation’s work throughout the developing
world. As the slides flashed on the screen I squirmed and hoped no one knew about the trivial
things my money had been spent on
during the past year.
A particularly enlightened aspect of Trocaire is that it stresses
the need to work for social justice. Fifteen million children die of hunger each
year not because there’s not enough food in the world – we’ve more food per
head now than ever before. Nor
because there are some “naturally poor” countries. It’s because the powerful of
the world have organized things so we burp and wonder how to cope with our waste
while the wretched of the earth grow gaunt and suffer.
Where most of us shake our heads and cluck our tongues;
Trocaire rolls up its sleeves to
help the dispossessed find a way to live. They’re good at marketing too. That
little RTÉ ad, for example. Voice
A: Granny wants a goat for Christmas. Voice B: She wants a coat? Voice A: No, a goat. Voice B: A GOAT? Oh OK. She’s the boss.” They even break down
their appeal so there’s one for each family member. Get Gran and Dad one of those goats this
Christmas (a goat-for-a-goat sort of thing) and a family the Democratic
Republic of Congo will find life transformed. Get Mum safe motherhood for
someone in Somalia, where more infants die at birth than nearly anywhere else on
the planet. Get youngsters to buy school fees and lunches, get farmers to give
a gift of chickens - there’s even a gift for a budding entrepreneur to help buy a house for a Honduran
family who’ve been living under plastic since being evicted from their homes.
God knows we all need to warm our hands round the fire, and this
Christmas especially. But if we close our ears to the knocking of the forgotten
of the world, we lose our right to curse the pension-grabbers in our own
country.
Go on, get Granny a goat and tell her to pass it on. It
really is better to give than receive.
Jude
ReplyDeleteAm I right in saying that Trocaire do not support the distribution of condoms in the fight against HIV and AIDS?
Hello gio - I really don't know. I'd guess they don't but the easy way would be to ask them, perhaps?
ReplyDeleteThe five countries with the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS are Swaziland (where 26.1 per cent of the population have the disease), Botswana (23.9 per cent infection rates), Lesotho (23.2 per cent), South Africa (18.1 per cent) and Namibia (15.3 per cent). Yet in Swaziland, 40 per cent of the population are Zionist (which has nothing to do with Judaism: it’s a blend of Christianity and indigenous ancestral worship), 30 per cent are ‘other’ (Anglican, Methodist, Mormon, Jewish), and only around 20 per cent are Roman Catholic. In Botswana, 71.6 per cent of the population are Christian, but the majority of these are Anglicans, Methodists or part of the United Congregational Church of Southern Africa. In South Africa, only 7.1 per cent of the population are Catholic; there is a far higher number of distinctly non-Catholic Christian believers. In Namibia, around 80 per cent of the population are Christian, but at least 50 per cent of these are Lutheran and the rest are a mix of other Christian faiths, including Catholicism. Lesotho has the highest rate of Catholics out of the five countries most affected by AIDS – but even there it’s only around 36 per cent of the population.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous
ReplyDeleteInteresting stats. However I was not attempting to link HIV/AIDS to Catholicism.
I do believe condom distribution and education in the use of contraception is an important tool in the fight though as I am sure all sensible people do.