1 / 18

Three weeks on Global Poverty

“We will spare no effort to free our fellow men, women, and children, from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty, to which more than a billion of them are now subjected.” Poverty and MDGs Christ Church, Advent Sunday 2003. Three weeks on Global Poverty.

bailey
Télécharger la présentation

Three weeks on Global Poverty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “We will spare no effort to free our fellow men, women, and children, from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty, to which more than a billion of them are now subjected.” Poverty and MDGs Christ Church, Advent Sunday 2003

  2. Three weeks on Global Poverty • Nov 30:UNDENIABLE POVERTY - Facts & TrendsWhat are the MDGs? Who are the poor? How much progress have we made? • Dec 7:OUR CURRENT RESPONSE What has been our response? Why has it diminished? How much would it cost to meet the MDGs? What is the response to date of our government, our church, our foundations and our corporations? • Dec 14: THE CAMBRIDGE CONSULTATIONWhat do our different kinds of responses achieve – Praying, Advocating, Teaching, Going, Giving, Sending?

  3. UNDENIABLE POVERTY • Now anxiety is the mark of spiritual insecurity. It is the fruit of unanswered questions. But questions cannot go unanswered unless they first be asked. And there is a far worse anxiety, a far worse insecurity, which comes from being afraid to ask the right questions—because they might turn out to have no answer. One of the moral diseases we communicate to one another in society comes from huddling together in the pale light of an insufficient answer to a question we are afraid to ask.[1] [1] Merton, Thomas.No Man is an Island xiii

  4. Planet Earth houses 6 billion children of God. One in five of us live in extreme material poverty.

  5. God’s children who live in poverty say: • “Poverty is like living in jail, living under bondage, waiting to be free” – Jamaica • For Brazilian parents, poverty is “to come home and see your children go hungry and not have anything to give them” • “This is a selfish land, with no place for the poor”. — India • “For a poor person everything is terrible – illness, humiliation, shame… We are like garbage that everyone wants to get rid of.” A blind woman from Moldova • A middle-aged woman in Bulgaria said: “A normal person has … some self-esteem, to take a holiday, read a book. While now – you work here or there all day in order to have something to eat, and at night you can’t even exchange a couple of words like normal persons, you drop off asleep as if you were dead. It’s as if you were dead while you were still alive.”

  6. Social progress has been great but has slowed down globally during the 1990s. 223 166 Under 5 Mortality Rate 132 103 91 Net Enrollment Rate 83 78 70 59 48 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

  7. Population below $1 a day 1987 & 1998Nearly ¾ of the poor lived in Asia in 1987, In 1998 65% of the poor live in Asia, 24% in Sub-Saharan Africa, and 6% in Latin America

  8. The Millennium Development Goals A pledge to achieve eight goals, made by 189 nations + others in the year 2000. Goals: 1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger (1.2 B, 815M) 2. Achieve universal primary education (115 M children) 3. Promote gender equality and empower women 4. Reduce child mortality (11 M under 5 deaths) 5. Improve maternal health (500,000+ die in childbirth) 6. Combat HIV/AIDS (3 M deaths 2003), malaria and other diseases 7. Ensure environmental sustainability (1 B lack safe water) 8. Develop a global partnership for development

  9. E.g. Universal Primary Education – Three regions are on track to achieve the goal. But three othersare in danger of falling short. Sub-Saharan Africa lags farthest behind. South Asia houses nearly twice as many illiterate folk, and has chronically low enrollment and completion rates.

  10. Under 5 Mortality (reducing by 2/3 the proportion of children who die before their fifth birthday).

  11. HIV AIDS and Africa:December 03 update • Approximately 40 million people are now living with HIV/AIDS (34-46m). • Of these, 26.6 million were living in Sub-Saharan Africa, and 3.2 million in SSA were newly infected in 2003. One in five people are infected. • In SSA women 15-24 are 2.5 times as likely to be infected as are men. • About 30% of people living with HIV/AIDS worldwide live in southern Africa, an area that is home to just 2% of the world’s population.

  12. Poverty – silent, vast, incomplete, but solvable in our times • The MDGs do not attend to violence / conflict • The MDGs do not stress human rights • These things also deserve our utmost attention But nearly ten times more people perish of poverty-related causes than of war or conflict (over 22 million in 2001 from preventable disease; vs 230,000 in war). On Sept 11th, 2001, over twice as many people perished of HIV/AIDS than in the tragic and horrific attack on the World Trade Towers.

  13. I didn’t know how to make garlands, or to keep a rose garden. Now it feels easy. Suppose a woman is not feeling well, we can do each others work. We have done so many times, to help each other out. People in the village now respect me. In the early morning, I pick flowers. When I do this, I feel I have done sawab – holy work. Inner peace comes. People tell me that the fragrance of roses is always in my clothes.

  14. I do not mean that there should be relief for others and pressure on you, but it is a question of a fair balance between your present abundance and their need, so that their abundance may be for your need, in order that there may be a fair balance. As it is written, “The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little.” 2 Corinthians 8:13-15

  15. No Data < 1 mil. 1 - 10 mil. 10 - 100 mil. > 100 mil. Global Distribution of Malnourished Population, 1997-99 Source: FAO Total Malnourished Population = 804 mil. Total Malnourished Children 150 mil.

  16. Number of illiterate women (Millions)

  17. No Data <5% 5% - 25% 25% - 50% >50% Chances of Not Surviving to Age 40,Females 2000 Source: Mortality: WHO 2000

More Related