Friday, May 09, 2008

Recipe for Hope: Responding to the Global Hunger Crisis

It's in the news nearly every day: Food prices are soaring worldwide (more on the crisis). More low-income people in the United States are making trips to food banks, where stocks are quickly depleting. For the world's poorest people in developing countries—who spend up to 80 percent of their income to buy food—the situation is even more devastating.

But you have the power to make a difference in this global hunger crisis. Bread for the World is launching an emergency Recipe for Hope online campaign which will run from Mother's Day through Father's Day.

Each week, an email from Bread will offer the ingredients for a:

Recipe for Despair—more information on the causes of this crisis

Recipe for Hope—specific actions you can take to help end it

It’s easy to feel helpless when you watch people around the world suffering for lack of food.
Join Bread for the World's Recipe for Hope and be part of the solution.


Resources for Churches
Prayers at Home
More on the crisis > >

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

I know what she meant: Why I agree with Michele Obama.

I know what she meant. I too am proud of my country in a way that cannot be compared to any pride I have heretofore experienced for the United States of America. That is not to say that I have never been proud of my country, merely that my heart swells when I think of what we as a people are now doing as we choose a president. For the first time in my life, I see us having deep and thoughtful discussions followed by careful deliberation resulting in history-making votes. We are seeing record numbers of voters turn out to vote in the presidential primaries and the greatest number of votes have gone to a woman and an African American man.

Let me share why I think this is so amazing. I was born and raised in a small, Central Texas town. Mostly German, somewhat Mexican, largely racist when I was a boy, this community has supported Barack Obama as the next Democratic Nominee for President of the United States.

My birthday is June 19, 1960something and our next door neighbor, Mrs. Coleman called me “Liberty Boy” and said to my mother “may he always know freedom” because I was a Juneteenth (emancipation day) baby. I can imagine that this was a little goading to my grandfather who had held a bias against Black people all of his life, albeit for no good reason. As the story goes, my grandfather had teased one of his close friends whose grandson, my friend Michael was to be born around the same period of time as I was and Grandpa had said that Michael would surely be born on the 19th and would have especially dark skin. God has a funny way of leveling the playing field, and I was the one born on June 19th. It’s a good thing too, or I might not have been prepared to handle the racism that I experienced in school, much less life as an out Gay man today.

Mrs. Coleman, my grandfather, my parents and all of our black neighbors learned to live together very happily. The racist systems and barriers that had for years pitted African Americans against Mexican Americans for jobs and opportunities fell away as neighbors became friends and alliances were forged to build a better future.

Still, its not all Bluebonnets and Yellow Roses. Rumors and lies have spread to convince some Latinos that Obama is not Christian, does not pledge allegiance to the flag, and did not take the oath on the Bible. I find it hard to believe that these tactics are coming from the Clinton campaign because I have friends that work for Senator Clinton and they are good people. No, I think they are coming from short-sighted and petty individuals who will do anything to win, or in this case to keep Sen. Obama from winning. What concerns me most is that Sen. Clinton did not do more to denounce these lies and I can’t imagine that she would be satisfied to win any vote resulting from this kind of fear mongering.

I guess I am just an idealist at heart. It sounds almost too simple to say that friendship overcomes politics. Trust overcomes racism. Hope overcomes fear. But, it rings true to me and I think to the majority of Democrats in my part of Texas. Perhaps for the first time in my adult life, I am proud of my hometown and I am proud of my country.

Marco A. Grimaldo is a lifelong Democrat from Texas who has spent his professional career working at the intersection of faith and politics in Washington, DC to help overcome hunger, poverty and injustice. Please feel free to contact the author at magrimaldo@gmail.com with any comments.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Disconnected

Disconnected from reality or just from the poor?

... those of us who grew up in Texas remember what the border looked like when we were kids, and it was really poor. And you go down to that border today, it is prosperous on both sides of the river...




Today, President Bush held a press briefing to argue for a number of things that he wants from Congress including the right to spy on Americans, but in the course of answering questions from reporters, he showed how little he understands the economy. Either he is disconnected from reality and does not know that his own administration has done little to meet the requirements of NAFTA in support of a stronger Mexican economy that would support Mexican workers with jobs that offer a decent life on the Mexican side of the border or he has chosen to lie to us in hopes that we will think that the boarder region of the southern United States is prosperous because of NAFTA.


Excerpt from President's White House Press Briefing (02-28-08) ...

John.

Q Thanks, Mr. President. There's been a lot of criticism on the campaign trail of free trade policies and even talk about the U.S. opting out of NAFTA. And it doesn't seem that you want to discuss the prospects of Republican candidates on the campaign trail this year, but --

THE PRESIDENT: Not yet.

Q Not yet. But just given all the concerns about the economy that people have, do you feel like you could win in a state like Ohio if you were running again for President?

THE PRESIDENT: Landslide. (Laughter.) Look, I am a big believer in free trade. And the reason why is I firmly believe that free trade is essential to the formation of high-paying, quality jobs. In other words, people who work for industries that export goods to overseas are likely to be paid more than their -- other workers.

Secondly, if you look at the -- our economic growth recently, particularly last year, a major portion of that growth came as a result of exports. It's an essential part of our economic picture.

Yes, I heard the talk about NAFTA. One statistic I think people need to know is I think there's roughly like $380 billion worth of goods that we ship to our NAFTA partners on an annual basis. Now, $380 billion worth of goods means there's a lot of farmers and businesses, large and small, who are benefiting from having a market in our neighborhood. And the idea of just unilaterally withdrawing from a trade treaty because of trying to score political points is not good policy. It's not good policy on the merits, and it's not good policy as a message to send to our -- people who have, in good faith, signed a treaty and worked with us on a treaty.

Thirdly, those of us who grew up in Texas remember what the border looked like when we were kids, and it was really poor. And you go down to that border today, it is prosperous on both sides of the river, to the credit of those who proposed NAFTA, and to the credit of those who got NAFTA through the Congress. If you're worried about people coming into our country illegally, it makes sense to help a place like Mexico grow its economy. Most folks would rather be finding a job close to home; most folks would rather not try to get in the bottom of an 18-wheeler to come and put food on the table.

This agreement has meant prosperity on both sides of our borders, north and south. And I believe it's in the interests to continue to seek markets for our farmers, ranchers and businesspeople. I also know it's in our interest to insist that when people sell products into our countries [sic], that we get treated fairly. In other words, if we treat a country one way, people in a country one way, we expect to be treated the same way -- like Colombia.

The Colombia Free Trade vote is coming up. Many of their products come into our country much easier than our products go into theirs. It makes sense to be treated equally. But on this vote, there's an additional consequence. If the Congress rejects the Colombia Free Trade Agreement, it will sorely affect the national security interests of the United States. It will encourage false populism in our neighborhood. It will undermine the standing of courageous leaders like President Uribe. And I strongly urge the Congress, when they bring this -- when the Colombia Free Trade Agreement is brought to a vote, to seriously consider the consequences of rejecting this trade agreement.


Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Brownsville ranks poorest in the nation - AGAIN!

This is the city where I lived when I attended High School. Friends of mine and I recently visited there on behalf of Bread for the World Institute to learn about persistent poverty.

I am ashamed that anyone would tout a population wherein 40% are below the poverty threshold as one that is making gains. Traci Wickett who is mentioned below is right. We have to get someone's attention. I hope that you will read this and help by paying attention to this and many other places in the U.S. and around the world where persistent hunger and poverty exist. MG

Brownsville ranks poorest in the nation

August 28, 2007 - 11:46PM
The Census Bureau ranks Brownsville as the most impoverished city in the nation, according to the bureau's 2006 American Community Survey released on Tuesday. More than 40 percent of the city's 171,000 residents live below the poverty line, the bureau's figures show.

The bureau's poverty threshold for an individual is a $10,294 annual income. For a family of four it is $20,614.

Despite the last-place standing, there are slight gains being made in this area. In 2005, the poverty level was 42.6 percent, compared to 40.6 percent in 2006.

Median household income in Brownsville, the fourth lowest in the nation, is also inching north — $26,017 last year, compared to $24,207 in 2005.

"We've got to get people's attention on this," said Traci Wickett, president of United Way of Southern Cameron County.

United Way aims to reduce poverty in two ways, she said. Its first strategy is to improve educational attainment through initiatives such as Success by Six, which focuses on high-quality early childhood education.

The other strategy is to getting people stable financially by accessing the Earned Income Tax Credit, and other state and employer benefits available to them.

"When we talk about poverty in our community, we're not talking about people who are unemployed. We have a lot of hard working people in our community who live below the poverty line."

In the Brownsville-Harlingen metropolitan statistical area the unemployment rate was 6.5 percent in June, compared to 7.4 percent the year prior. That's about 9,400 people.

Area-wide, the Census Bureau rated Hidalgo County as the poorest county in the nation, with Cameron County coming second to last.

Also on Tuesday, the bureau released another population report, titled, "Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2006.

According to that survey, Texas had the highest population of uninsured in the country, with 24.1 percent. That survey does not give more local data.



On the Web: www.census.gov

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Disclaimer: Poverty is not really all that bad, is it?

What follows is taken directly from the Heritage Foundation website. You can find it yourself by calling up a list of all issues coverend by the Heritage Foundation and under Welfare Reform it will list Poverty and Inequality. This is just the disclaimer. It was clearly not enough for the Heritage Folks to claim that poverty is "more limited in scope and severity than one might think." No, they then list a series of articles and lectures published over the past few years, each with some other bombastic claim:

Performance Based Pay is Driving Increase in Inequality and that claims of growing hunger in the U.S. are wildly exaggerated... Published in 2004, the paper intended to discredit the reality of hunger experienced daily by millions of Americans has been proven wrong, year after year as hunger and poverty continued to increase. Now who's exaggerating?

Poverty & Inequality: "ISSUES > Welfare > Poverty & Inequality

Poverty and Inequality

For most Americans, the word poverty suggests destitution: an inability to provide a family with nutritious food , clothing, and reasonable shelter. Advocates of the welfare state often urge large expansions of welfare spending to combat allegedly widespread poverty in America, yet only a small portion of the 37 million persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau fit that description. While real material hardship certainly does occur, it is much more limited in scope and severity than one might imagine." ~ The Heritage Foundation

Thursday, August 02, 2007

How the Democrats Got Religion

How the Democrats Got Religion


A President has to be a preacher of sorts, instructing, consoling, summoning citizens to sacrifice for some common good. But candidates are competitors, which means they seldom manage to talk about faith in a way that doesn't disturb people, doesn't divide them, doesn't nail campaign posters on the gates of heaven. Republicans have been charged with exploiting religious voters, Democrats with ignoring them: Hillary Clinton's voice gets tight as she recalls the mocking response she received when she first spoke in spiritual terms about the longing that people felt to invest in causes larger than self-interest. "I talked about my faith years ago and was pilloried for it," she says, and it is hard to tell if she is more impatient with the conservatives who presumed they held the patent on piety or with the liberals whose worship of diversity all but excluded the devout. Read this recent article in Time Magazine (full article)

Friday, December 01, 2006

Hunger or Very Low Food Security? You decide.

I am posting this because it is an excellent article on hunger in the United States.This year, the US Deaprtment of Agriculture stoped using the word hunger and replaced it with the term "very low food security" to describe the 35 million people who live in homes that struggle to put food on the table. The story was covered in major papers nationwide, but Time has a great job covering the issue and it is worth the read. It is sad that political interests often prevail, even against the interests of hungry children. I hate to think that in difficult political times the best we can do is push the burden of high national debt fueld by tax breaks for the wealthy onto the backs of the poor, as if we are an "everyone for themselves" country with no sense of responsibility or community.
Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006
What It Means to Go Hungry

A controversial new government report has excised the term "hunger" altogether in favor of more supposedly accurate measurements. But sometimes words have a power that statistics do not.
By NANCY GIBBS
Since Thanksgiving is the day we count our blessings instead of our carbs, it is a ripe moment to talk about hunger. Or perhaps, to talk about how we talk about hunger. When the government released its annual survey on Household Food Security in the United States last week, as it has every year since 1995, there was for the first time a word missing — a very important word. The report stated that about 35 million Americans sometimes don't always know where their next meal will come from, and a third of those sometimes experience "very low food security." But as of this year, the word "hunger" no longer applies.

The complete article can be found TIME.com Click here for the rest of the story.

8,000 people die of AIDS every day...


Faith and AIDS

Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise

World AIDS Day is a unique moment each year when all of humanity is challenged to reflect on the way that HIV and AIDS affects us and how we can respond to the pandemic. The theme this year focuses on Accountability. Since Logos is about Faith and Public policy, I hope that you will take the time to visit the links that lead you to a variety of faith groups that are involved in promoting and commemorating World AIDS Day this year.

I have spent most of my professional career working on issues related to HIV and AIDS in one way or another, and one thing that surprises me again and again, it how many people still find it odd that I am so personally committed to my faith as a follower of Jesus. Too many long-time, committed Christians either find it distasteful that I have worked with people with AIDS and continue to advocate for things like clean needles for injection drug users and free condoms for anyone who will use them to protect their own lives and the lives of their partners. Too many others find it odd that I consider my work as an important part of my ministry, along with my advocacy for hungry and poor people around the world and my modest efforts to keep those whom I consider more radical Christians on the political "right" in check. Both are true. Both are important to me. And, if you keep visiting me here, I will try and share with you more of what I believe and why. Who knows, maybe you will choose to write about similar values on your own blog and if you do, I will try my best to mention it here.


About 10 years ago, I started working with Bread for the World as a consultant on a short term contract to help the organization stay connected with Bread members in the Western states. It was great and though there are many things I could say about my early experience with Bread staff and members, perhaps I have been most impacted by a man who speaks softly, clearly, and with great conviction - Rev. Art Simon, founder of Bread for the World. Art reminds me of my grandfather Rev. Jose Angel Hernandez, but that is not the reason I credit him so highly. It is because Art wrote a book called Faith and Public Policy: No Grounds for Divorce. Like Art I am concerned that people of faith, in my case, Christians, need to do a better job of living out our experince of the Love of Jesus Christ, which arguably can only be accomplished when we simultaneously work for justice in God's world. St. Augstine said, "Faith without works is dead." and what he meant was that it is not enough to pray for healing and not tend the wound before you. Similarly, it is not enough to provide someone with food today without also working for justice that offers a chance to build a life and provide for themselves and their families. I am concerned that there may be a growing divide between those who selectively refer to passages of the Bible to support their political positions and those who struggle with political powers to honestly live into our ministry to love and serve the Lord. Thank you Art for helping me to see that I am often happiest when living my live at the intersection of faith and public policy.


World AIDS Day
This years theme is Accountability - "Keep the Promise" to Access to Medicines The UNAIDS 2006 AIDS Epidemic Update reports an estimated 4.3 million new HIV infections worldwide in 2006, 400,000 more new infections than in 2004. The highest rates of new infections are among those ages 15 to 24 and among married women in their twenties and thirties. Two-thirds of people infected with HIV worldwide live in sub-Saharan Africa, and women make up 60 percent of those infected in that region.

In the United States, over one million Americans are estimated to be living with HIV. Moreover, an estimated 250,000 of these individuals are not even aware of it. Unfortunately our system of HIV/AIDS care and community services is increasingly over-burdened and fragile. Indeed, with an erosion of federal funding for these programs, they have become little more than a patchwork. Over time, the nature of HIV disease has changed, but the programs have not. We must do more to fund sound, effective HIV prevention, care, treatment and support programs for people living with HIV and AIDS in the United States and we must do our part to help countries who are doing all they can to help overcome HIV and AIDS among their own citizens.



"Declines in national HIV prevalence are being observed in some sub-Saharan African countries, but are neither strong enough nor widespread enough to diminish the epidemic's overall impact." ~ UNAIDS 2006 Report.



The report from UNAIDS concludes that "in many countries, HIV prevention programs are not reaching the people most at risk of infection, such as young people, women and girls, men who have sex with men, sex workers and their clients, injecting drug users and ethnic and cultural minorities." The U.S. has invested a great deal of money into fighting AIDS around the world through what is known as PEPFAR. (Read about Global AIDS legislation)


On the subject of accountability, the Center for Global Development has been working to track investments in development assistance and health care including PEPFAR and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Mead Over is a researcher and Senior Fellow at CGD, where he works on issues related to the economics of efficient, effective and cost-effective health interventions in developing countries. According to Mead, resources committed to AIDS have grown at an extraordinary rate.

Mead says, "The AIDS treatment community is still learning how to spend these resources effectively. Even if resource flows flatten off at current levels, which they do not yet show a sign of doing, the treatment community will play catch up for a few years as it learns how to spend these resources most effectively." (Please note: The Center for Global Development borrowed the graph below from the medical journal Lancet and so I am borrowing to share with you as well.)

What Mead says is true and sadly, this is proven when we learn that resources, both U.S. dollars and money from other donor countries is not always reaching the right people, those at greatest risk for becoming HIV positive, and those who need help to stay alive, work, and care for their families. Bread for the World often partners with the Center for Global Development and other organizations that work to make sure that the resource we spend to help people in need are truly reaching those we seek to serve.



Money Well Spent

Aid effectiveness, weather it is poverty-focused development assistance to help small farmers, or funds for purchasing life-saving medicines to treat AIDS and T.B. or just mosquito nets to protect children from Malaria, is always a top priority for Americans, and the good news is that it is money well spent. Still, what truly encourages me is the fact that my sisters and brothers - the majority of voters in the U.S. - who despite being concerned that money won't get where it is intended - nonetheless report in survey after survey, that not enough is being done to combat hunger and disease in the world and that they want U.S. political leaders to do more. Democrats and Republicans alike responded in large numbers to questions like these and it is among the things that let me take heart. We, Americans, citizens, are taking reresponsibility not because we owe anyone anything, but because it is simply the right thing to do. (Note: Learn more about the Alliance to End Hunger)

What can I do?
Learn more about HIV/AIDS and get involved. I am struck that just yesterday, not long before I gave my talk at American University about World AIDS Day, Faith-based and secular human rights advocates joined together in a call for accountability in US Global AIDS prevention policy to ensure that U.S. funds are used for comprehensive prevention strategies worldwide. Can you believe it, there is so much going on and so many ways to get involved that I did not even know that good friends and colleagues of mine were in the midst of such important work. Read the statements by these leaders and stay informed.

Worship
I am truly blessed that my work allows me to pray, correction, they encourage me to pray as often as it takes to get the job done. As someone who has lost too many people to AIDS, my former partner and many close friends, I can say with conviction that without prayer, I would not have the strength to write to you now. No matter what your faith experience, take the time to day to seek God in whatever way you can best approach the divine in your life. I am Christian, Presbyterian in fact, so for me things are fairly clear. If you would like more information about worship activities and faith groups who commemorate World AIDS Day, follow the links on this blog, or check out the http://beta.blogger.com/Connect

Find out what your church or faith community has said about HIV and AIDS and ask religious leaders what they have done to follow up on their statements. Learn about the commitments toward universal access to education, treatment and support made by governments and how you can join in civil society to ensure that effective targets are made and kept. http://www.ungasshiv.org/

Link up to other community events around World AIDS Day. Promote and take part in them. Support efforts of networks of people living with HIV and AIDS.