From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
BRITAIN: AID CHIEF SPEAKS OUT
From
Audrey Whitefield <a.whitefield@quest.org.uk>
Date
28 Oct 1997 11:47:46
Oct. 21, 1997
ANGLICAN COMMUNION NEWS SERVICE
Canon Jim Rosenthal, Director of Communications
Anglican Communion Office
London, England
[97.10.1.4]
BRITAIN: AID CHIEF SPEAKS OUT
(from ENI) Aid agencies have to adopt a twin strategy to combat poverty,
according to Michael Taylor, the outgoing director of Christian Aid, one
of Britain's main church-sponsored development agencies. Mr Taylor
believes that aid agencies must work to alleviate poverty and at the
same time struggle to change the system.
Mr Taylor, who is leaving Christian Aid to become president, from next
January, of the Selly Oak Colleges in Birmingham - a group of mainly
church-related colleges, some with a missionary background - has been
credited with making the organisation the "preeminent voice of radical
Christianity".
In an interview with ENI conducted at Christian Aid's London
headquarters, Mr Taylor described Christian Aid's approach to
development as "walking on two legs".
"It is not enough simply to try to alleviate poverty on the ground," he
said. "But nor is the struggle for system change enough. We have to give
equal attention to both."
He referred to the late Mother Teresa's "magnificent contribution" for
the destitute and dying in India, but added: "If she was to be
criticised, it was for the way she met the immediate needs of the poor
and the sick and the dying, but did little and said little about the
social and political structures of the world which kept on making them
poor and sick. She did not confront the principalities and powers.
"We must not make the opposite mistake, and be so busy with our
political campaigns that we neglect to be compassionate here and now."
Christian Aid, which is the official relief and development agency of 40
British and Irish Churches, combines an extensive programme of grants
in more than 65 countries with a vigorous campaigning approach to issues
like Third World debt, unfair trade practices and reform of the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
A 61-year-old Baptist minister, Mr Taylor is depressed at the
persistence of poverty, but sees the present as in some ways a time of
"fresh hope". The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, he
suggested, were showing signs of softening the harshest aspects of
structural adjustment programmes - which have been often criticised for
leading to cutbacks in social programmes in developing countries - and
public and official sentiment was swinging behind a campaign to write
off unpayable Third World debt to mark the new millennium - a campaign
in which Christian Aid and other church organisations are playing an
important part.
Mr Taylor is pleased that Christian Aid is "seen as a front-runner in
campaigns". One of the organisation's current campaigns thumps home the
message that the UK's top 10 supermarkets make more money in a year than
the world's 35 poorest countries combined. Shoppers are encouraged to
switch to fair-trade products where the growers and producers have not
been exploited.
The churches back Christian Aid with individual subscriptions and
through support for the annual Christian Aid week, which raises funds
for the agency through street collections and other activities.
Christian Aid week alone supplied almost a quarter of the charity's
1995-96 gross income of 39.5 million pounds sterling (US$63.2 million).
Overseas spending in 1993-94 included 18.9 million pounds on development
projects, 11.4 million pounds on emergencies and 1.5 million pounds to
support refugees.
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