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World Council of Churches Tackles Violence Head-On


From cfouke@ncccusa.org
Date Thu, 27 Nov 2003 12:25:00 GMT

For Immediate Release
AACC Media Team: (011) 237 966 3059 or 3063

WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES TO TACKLE VIOLENCE HEAD ON

November 27, 2003, Yaounde, Cameroon -- Taking on the significant role of 
World Council of Churches General Secretary in January 2004 presents 
enormous challenges for Dr. Samuel Kobia.  

A priority that has been endorsed over and over again at the All Africa 
Conference of Churches 8th Assembly, meeting here, is the pressing issue 
of violence which continues to affect not only Africa, but the world.

Dr. Kobia said the WCC's program to overcome violence intends to provide 
leadership as well as a basis for networking between countries that have 
been successful in their own context of stemming violence.   

He cites the example of a project undertaken by churches in Boston, 
Massachusetts, U.S.A., where two rival gangs pursued each other into a 
church service and one member was shot dead in front of shocked 
parishioners.  As a result the congregation resolved to take charge of the 
street themselves.  Ministers went into the ghettos and talked to members 
of the community and provided them with conflict resolutions skills for 
the community.

Utilizing the Urban Rural Mission Programme in Senegal, both Christians 
and Muslims have been working together to resolve the conflict in Southern 
Senegal, which was threatening to tear apart two communities.  They sat 
down with the leadership in both communities to agree to pursue dialogue 
rather than fighting.

"It is vital to teach conflict resolutions skills to young people at an 
early age.  Therein lies the solution," Dr. Kobia says.

The WCC's program to overcome violence was a direct response to problems 
brought to the WCC by South Africa.

"It was Bishop Stanley Mogoba during a service in Johannesburg who 
challenged the WCC to accompany South Africa on such a program," he 
said. "When a Methodist Church in Durban was burned down, Christians, 
Jews, Muslims and Buddhists who had been working together, took the 
initiative and used the charred wood as a cross, symbolising the self-
destruction of communities. For Christians, this was a powerful image of 
the death and resurrection of Christ."

That a solution needs to be found soon to the violence and intimidation 
that continues unabated in Zimbabwe, Dr. Kobia is only too aware.  While 
he appeared to be reticent about specifics, it is obvious from what he did 
reveal that the WCC is seriously engaged in addressing the issue.  

The WCC has been in contact with the Zimbabwe Council of Churches and has 
reached a point, he says, that makes it absolutely essential for churches 
to come out boldly and say that the situation can no longer be tolerated.  

"It is risky and takes courage, but it is a gospel imperative.	They will 
have to stand up as the churches did in South Africa to overcome 
Apartheid," he said.

The WCC has also written to the Minister of Justice to express concern for 
the lawlessness and disregard for law and order, even naming people who 
can identify their tormentors and ask that they be dealt with.

In the weeks and months ahead, he said, the WCC will engage on behalf of 
the ecumenical movement in serious consultations with the Zimbabwe Council 
of churches and other ecumenical bodies to express their readiness to 
search for a just solution.  

This, he said, lies in the Government of Zimbabwe accepting to respect the 
wishes of the Zimbabwean people, which means dealing with the elections, 
which have not been free and fair.  It will mean giving the Zimbabwe 
people the right to choose their own leaders, a process that will have to 
be monitored by international bodies.  Christian in neighboring countries 
should also show their solidarity by monitoring such a process.

"I am aware of and clearly appreciate the urgency and for that reason I 
have been consulting here with the General Secretary of the Zimbabwe 
Council of Churches and also with Bishop Sebastian Bokare," Dr. Kobia 
said.  "They have assured us that initiatives have been taken to promote 
dialogue between the MDC and the government.  It is happening now as we 
speak and is a process which is likely to take weeks and not months," he 
said.

									   
		  By Val Pauquet AACC 

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