I have friends who like to say that the world would be
better off without the church. Today, 2,400,000
Africans would disagree with them.
If it had not been for the United Methodist Church (and her partners)
many of those 2.4 million people, most of them children…
…would be dead.
In 2010, children in sub-Saharan Africa were dying from
malaria at a rate of one every 30 seconds.
Today that rate has dropped to one every 60 seconds. The difference? Our church’s campaign to eliminate
malaria. In 2008, we had “Nothing but
Nets” which partnered with the NBA as well as the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation. Then in 2010 this effort
became “Imagine No Malaria.” Imagine No Malaria still has the support of
the Gates Foundation but also the World Health Organization, The Global Fund to fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the United
Nations Foundation. Since 2008, The
United Methodist Church has raised $40 million dollars toward our goal of $75
million. Together, we have distributed 1.2
million insecticide treated bed nets and trained 5400 community health workers
to distribute bed nets, train families in their use, and track usage
rates. The results are obvious. In the last three years we have reduced the
childhood death rate (from malaria) by half.
Why us? Why is the
church important if the NBA, Bill Gates, the UN, and these other big names are
already involved? Is it just because
eleven million United Methodists can raise money? That is undeniably a part of it, but helping
the poor has been a part of our United Methodist DNA from the very
beginning. For 200 years we have built
and maintained hospitals and schools all across the continent of Africa. When this project was conceived, everyone
knew that while Americans can often be generous, and some are great at
publicity, someone had to be the “boots on the ground.” United Methodists were already there, all
across the continent of Africa. Over two
centuries we have built relationships with governments, leaders and decision makers
in many of those nations and we established a reputation as being genuinely
interested in the welfare of their people, as well as trustworthy.
Of course, we can’t rest yet. The job isn’t done. We haven’t reached our goals and one child
every sixty seconds is still way too many.
The goal of Imagine No Malaria is the total elimination and eradication
of malaria from the face of the earth.
That’s a long way off, but we’re headed in the right direction.
I don’t pretend that United Methodists have a monopoly on
compassion. Clearly our story is just
one of many. Imagine No Malaria is just
one way, that one church, is making a difference. And so, to all those who think we would be
better off without the church, I say this:
The people of Africa would like to disagree with you…
…because today their children are not dead.
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