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[PCUSANEWS] Cost of war and disaster is incalculable, CWS chief


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ECUNET.ORG>
Date Thu, 11 Nov 2004 07:31:17 -0600

Note #8568 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

04500
November 10, 2004

Cost of war and disaster is incalculable, CWS chief says

McCullough says faith community called to heal otherwise broken world

by Jerry L. Van Marter

ST. LOUIS - Insurance adjusters and statisticians can readily calculate the
financial cost of disasters and wars, Church World Service (CWS) Executive
Director John McCullough told the opening session of the joint National
Council of Churches/CWS General Assembly here today.

	"But more than the loss of property," McCullough said, speaking of
the four hurricanes that slammed into Florida in rapid succession this
summer, "is the matter of lives turned upside down, and traumatized - perhaps
for a lifetime, forever suspicious of strong winds blowing in from the
south."

	And reflecting on a visit to Iraq earlier this year, McCullough said
victims estimate the civilian death toll at 50,000 - triple U.S. government
estimates. More importantly, he said, "they detailed the stories of broken
and shattered lives, of fractured hopes and dreams. The human drama in
disasters should not be distorted by official pronouncements, or by the work
of statisticians."

	In both situations, humanitarian assistance is absolutely critical
but also problematic, McCullough said.

	CWS is expert at joining forces with other faith groups and local
voluntary organizations to "assure that all who need assistance get it." But
invariably, not all who need help get it, and "re-weaving the fabric that
will restore communities" is a long-term effort.

	Military interventions, such as the Iraq war and the War on Terror
"have had a significant impact on CWS programs," McCullough said.
"Historically, humanitarian action is fundamentally seen as 'Northern' and
'Western.'

	"Unfortunately, the 'war on terror' is perceived by many to represent
the same perspective .... This creates confusion about whom and what we
represent .... The crises in Afghanistan and Iraq have resulted in a
dangerous blurring of the lines between humanitarian and political action and
also the consequent erosion of core humanitarian principles of impartiality
and independence," he said.

	Increasingly, he added, partners such as the Middle East Council of
Churches are "challenging churches in America, saying that more than
responding to crises as they occur, the churches must strengthen their
witness so as to prevent the root causes from ever bursting into conflict."

	U.S. churches must ask themselves whether the positions they take
"have a definitive bearing on the duality of eradicating hunger and poverty
and promoting peace and justice? Do we offer solutions that address the
realities of the most vulnerable?"

	The task is far more than a numbers game - tons of food shipped,
numbers of blankets distributed, numbers of temporary shelters constructed.
"More than material possession, it is about the matter of lives turned upside
down and traumatized....It's about trying hard to weave the pieces of unity,
peace and justice, and hope together," McCullough said. "It's about what we
can do as a community of faith to help in the healing process of our
otherwise broken and fractured world."

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