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Hunger and Food Aid |
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An invitation
from the Presbyterian Hunger Program: Become a
Food Justice Fellow
Apply now!
[2-9-11]
For this new initiative, the Presbyterian
Hunger Program is seeking individuals who are working to build
just, equitable and sustainable local food economies in their
communities and around the world. A potential Food Justice
Fellow is someone who is concerned about hunger in a world of
plenty; someone who is excited by direct connections between
farmers and eaters and is eager to make that possible in ‘food
deserts’; someone who is motivated by their faith; and above
all, someone seeking justice. If this describes you,
send in your application before February 28.
The Presbyterian Hunger Program will gather
the group of Fellows for an annual training and networking. We
will also connect Fellows with partners and organizations in the
United States and around the world and facilitate regular
conversation among Fellows. By strengthening localized food
systems based on Christian principles of justice and
stewardship, communities are able to become more self-reliant
and economically prosperous.
Become a Food Justice Fellow and pass this
information to a young (or young at heart) adult who would be
great for this.
Read more and download the application at the Food and Faith
Blog. |
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Experience the good food
revolution
Heaven on
Earth Agrarian Road Trip to the U.S. Social Forum
June 13-26, 2010
We've
received this from Andrew Kang Bartlett, Presbyterian
Hunger Program
Come experience food justice as we
visit church and community initiatives in Kentucky, Tennessee,
North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio and Michigan along
the way to Detroit for the
2010 U.S. Social Forum. Celebrate the grassroots sustainable
food and agricultural revolution that is sprouting up
everywhere. Join with college students, farmers, musicians,
bloggers, and other adventurous souls. Hosted by the
Presbyterian Hunger Program and rooted in the agrarian heart of
the Bible.
Learn more and sign up today.
Download an application and a
flier. |
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Food Justice --
from the Presbyterian Hunger Program
[12-9-09]
What happens when
— the numbers of hungry people has surpassed the
one billion mark, and when
— 642 persons gather from 93 countries
representing 450 organizations of peasant and family farmers,
small-scale fisher folk, pastoralists, indigenous peoples,
youth, women, the urban people, agricultural workers, local and
international NGOs, faith groups and other social actors, and
hold a parallel gathering to the United Nations World Food
Security Summit in Rome in November, 2009?
They declare that
food sovereignty is the real solution to the tragedy of
hunger in our world.
The declaration calls for:
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The participation of women, small-scale
farmers, Indigenous Peoples, artisanal fisherfolk, food
workers, youth, the urban poor, environmental organizations,
human rights defenders, NGOs working for the realization of
the right to food and food sovereignty and to ensure that
their voices are heard when making agricultural, trade and
development assistance policies. |
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The commitment of governments and U.N.
agencies to the eradication of hunger and malnutrition, the
realization of the right to food and the people's food
sovereignty agenda. |
Read the inspiring People’s Declaration
which can be
found in English, Spanish and French – or
downloaded directly in English here.
JUICY SIDES
Fresh chorizo Mexican sausage recipe
Guatemala update from the December global food
crisis fast
WARC/Global Dialogue on the Accra Confession
“Farmworkers,
Low-wage Jobs, and Living into a New Economy”
Online Workshop Session and Liturgical Materials on Farm Worker
Justice |
Homelessness,
hunger on rise in US cities
[12-15-08]Agence France-Presse
reports:
Homelessness and hunger increased in an
overwhelming majority of 25 US cities in the past year, driven
by the foreclosure crisis and rising unemployment, a survey
showed Friday.
Out of 25 cities across the United States
surveyed by the US Conference of Mayors, 83 percent said
homelessness in general had increased over the past year while
16 cities, or nearly two-thirds of those polled, cited a rise in
the number of families who had been forced out of their homes.
In Louisville, Kentucky, the number of
homeless families increased 58 percent in 2008 to 931 families
from 591 people in 2007, with the rise blamed on soaring food,
health care, transportation and energy prices.
The
rest of the story >>
Can you add to this?
Does this report mesh
with your own community these days? What’s your sense of what’s
being done about the rising incidence of homeless and hunger where
you are? Are you aware of things that churches or others are doing,
that might be helpful models for the rest of us?
Please send
a note, to be shared here! |
| Season of Hunger: A Crisis of
Food Inflation & Shrinking Safety Nets in the U.S.
[12-1-08] This will be a grim
Thanksgiving for millions in the U.S.
Hunger and food insecurity is on the increase in
the U.S. as families face ultimatums: to pay for food or rent, food
or medicine. The situation has been made worse with the U.S. facing
the worst food inflation in 17 years. Families are running out of
food by the end of the month, parents are skipping meals so children
can have enough to eat, and families are doing without minimally
adequate, balanced and healthy diets.
Children are among the most vulnerable U.S.
populations. According to a recent report from the USDA, hunger
among children worsened in 2007, increasing by more than 50 percent.
691,000 children suffered from hunger sometime in 2007, up
significantly from 430,000 in 2006.
A new Briefing Paper from the Oakland Institute,
Season of Hunger : A Crisis of Food Inflation & Shrinking Safety
Nets in the U.S., examines the causes of growing hunger and food
insecurity in the U.S. and suggests long term and structural changes
required to reform the precarious food system, emergency food
assistance programs, wages, and employment in the United States.
Read the
Briefing Paper >> |
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More on the food price crisis:
A Wake Up Call for New Policies to Eradicate Hunger
[4-16-08]
The Oakland Institute,
"a progressive policy think tank working to increase public
participation and promote fair debate on critical social, economic,
environmental and foreign policy issues." takes note of
the current crisis and the many countries where emergency measures
are being taken. But they add:
It is however essential
to understand the underpinnings of this food crisis before rushing
to adopt policy solutions. Over the last few decades liberalization
of agriculture, dismantling of state run institutions like marketing
boards, and specialization of developing countries in exportable
cash crops such as coffee, cocoa, cotton, and even flowers,
encouraged by international financial institutions backed by rich
countries like the U.S., has driven the poorest countries into a
downward spiral, directly threatening food security and economic
sustainability.
More >>
Note that Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director of
the Institute, will be one of the main presenters at the
Presbyterian Peacemaking Conference this summer, July 15-19, in
Orange, California, on the theme “Sowing Mustard Seeds: Working for
God's Justice – Confronting Poverty.” |
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Why Food Costs Are Climbing
[4-12-08] The Toronto Globe and Mail's
Eric Reguly writes: "For the first time in decades, the specter of
widespread hunger for millions looms as food prices explode. Two
words not in common currency in recent years – famine and starvation
– are now being raised as distinct possibilities in the poorest,
food-importing countries."
The causes are many and complex. (But you knew
that, didn’t you?) He includes the growing global population,
soaring energy prices, competition from biofuels, the rising demands
for meat from the rising Asian middle class, climate change, and
“hot money pouring into the commodity markets.”
He cites Nigeria's Kanayo Nwanze, vice-president
of the UN's International Fund for Agricultural Development, as
saying, "I wouldn't be surprised if there is an escalation of food
riots in the next few months. It could lead to famine in certain
parts of Africa if the international community and local governments
do not put emergency actions into place."
He concludes his report with another statement by
Mr. Nwanze: "I can say with some degree of confidence that if
governments and international development agencies do not put in
place a concerted effort quickly, then we are looking at a very
serious problem."
Read the full article – in the Globe and Mail
... or
on
TruthOut
Another view: it’s the free market system
Another analysis of
the situation, under the title “Let Them Eat Ethanol!” is provided
by Sharon Smith, writing for Counterpunch. She tells of the
growing conflicts over food scarcity in Haiti and Egypt ... and in
the United States, where “food inflation ... has reached a level not
seen in decades, with food staples like milk rising 17 percent over
the last year, rice, pasta and bread rising over 12 percent and eggs
increasing by 25 percent.”
She places the blame
for the situation not so much on a shortage of food, as on “the
merciless laws of the free market.”
The full
article >> |
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U.S. Food Aid Requires Drastic
Changes: Take Action Today
[6-20-07] An Action
Alert from ActionAid USA, Oakland Institute, & Washington Office
on Latin America
Each year millions of tons of food are shipped
from the United States to developing countries as food aid. But
a dirty little secret is hiding in the food aid system.
U.S. food aid policy is primarily geared
towards the interests of multinational agribusiness and shipping
companies. All food provided by the U.S. food aid program must
be produced in the United States and shipped abroad at great
cost. This preference given to in-kind food produced in the U.S.
and the U.S. shipping industry makes U.S. food aid unnecessarily
expensive. In addition, the U.S. procurement requirement delays
delivery of emergency food aid by nearly five months on average.
A proposal to allow one quarter of emergency
resources to be used to purchase food grown by local or regional
producers is being considered in Congress. But Members of
Congress need to hear from constituents that this is an issue
they care about. Call your Senators and Congressional
Representatives TODAY to support the proposed change in the 2007
Farm Bill which would allow for 25% of emergency food aid
purchases under Title II to be provided in cash for local and
regional purchase rather than as commodities purchased in the
United States and shipped to developing countries.
CALL
Senate: 202-224-3121 (Operator
assistance); House: 202-225-3121 (Operator assistance)
Urge Congress to ensure food aid goes to those
in need, not corporations!
More
>> |
| Historic interfaith convocation insists
"Hunger No More" By Matthew Davies, Episcopal
News Service
[6-9-05]
Washington, D.C. – In an unprecedented gathering, more
than 1,000 people of various religious affiliations joined leaders of more
than 40 faith communities for an interfaith convocation at Washington
National Cathedral June 6 united in a common conviction that no one should
go hungry.
Hosted by the Episcopal Diocese of Washington, D.C., the
event formed part of the One Table, Many Voices conference, a mobilization
organized by two advocacy groups, Bread for the World and Call to Renewal,
to highlight issues of domestic and international hunger and to call on
President Bush and the United States Congress to commit to eradicating
poverty worldwide.
Addressing the "Hunger No More" convocation, Archbishop
Njongonkulu Ndungane of Cape Town spoke passionately about how "the plight
of the hungry must not be left for heaven."
Bishop John Chane of Washington welcomed the gathering to
the cathedral, insisting that "we are living in a new generation that will
no longer know the poverty that destroys millions of God's people."
Introduced by Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold, Ndungane
explained that 852 million people face hunger every day and that, even in a
wealthy nation such as the United States, there are 36 million people who
are "food insecure," almost 13 million of whom are children.
"Hunger in the U.S. has been on the rise for the last four
years," Ndungane reported. "Yet with such need, proposals in the current
budget debate to cut [federal government nutrition] programs and deprive
hundreds of thousands of working families of food support, cannot be
justified, and must be opposed," he added, to a wave of applause.
Ndungane described personal encounters of poverty and
hardship from his homeland, South Africa, stressing that people would rather
be given opportunities than hand-outs. "I have seen the face of poverty in
the eyes of far too many men, women, children, the elderly, people with
disability," he said. "Their message was 'Archbishop, take our voices to the
corridors ofpower, and say for us, "We do not want hand-outs; we have
brains; we have hands; give us the capacity to eke out our own existence.'"
Speaking about 2005 as a "kairos" moment -- a Greek term
denoting special turning points or opportunities -- Ndungane explained that
with the run-up to the G-8 Summit in July and the UN Millennium meeting in
September, "there is everything to play for" and a real opportunity to make
a difference. "Now is the kairos moment when we start making hunger
history," he said. "Now is the decisive point to which we will look back
when we reach our goal of 'hunger no more.'"
Drawing on different cultures and traditions, the
convocation featured a feast of readings and musical offerings that included
a Zulu freedom song, gospel choir performances, a hymn from South Africa's
Xhosa tribe and texts from Sikh, Hebrew, Christian, Muslim and Buddhist
sacred writings.
A call to commitment came from several children, who asked
international leaders to make the world a better place, posing the question:
"What will you do to make a difference?"
The Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World,
described the convocation as an "unprecedented event" in the nation's
history. "This convocation is of God -- bigger than any one of us," he said.
"God has made it possible in our time to reduce hunger and we need to get
the job done."
Beckmann joined Ndungane and the Rev. Mark Hanson,
presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), at a
news conference earlier in the day, during which Ndungane also described the
event as a historic and unique occasion -- "a time when faith leaders are
able to unite, regardless of their differences, to issue a clarion call to
the world."
Alex Baumgarten, international policy analyst in the
Episcopal Church's Office of Government Relations (OGR), moderated a June 5
workshop on the G-8 Summit and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), an
eight-prong declaration that seeks to cut extreme poverty in half by 2015.
Baumgarten explained that all aspects of poverty are
intertwined and that disease and conflict, for example, increase the
inhibition of economic growth.
"The goals seek to focus both on traditional development
concerns like institutions and governance, but also on the structural
barriers that prevent development, like barriers to trade or the burden of
debt repayments by impoverished countries," Baumgarten said. "Developing
nations spend a large proportion of their annual budgets paying back debt to
wealthy international creditors, impeding their ability to deal with issues
like poverty, disease, and education."
With 10 years left in the MDGs' lifespan, Baumgarten said,
"It's a make or break moment. If we are going to meet these goals, a
significant increase in resources from industrialized nations is needed."
According to statistics, there are 54 countries in the
world that are poorer now than they were in 1990, Baumgarten explained.
"Even with commitment to MDGs we are still dramatically behind," he said.
After three days of workshops and plenary sessions that
covered all aspects of hunger, poverty and related issues, the "One Table,
Many Voices" conference, held June 4-7 at the American University in
Washington, D.C., culminated on National Hunger Awareness Day, June 7, with
a rally on Capitol Hill.
Maureen Shea, director of the Office of Government
Relations -- which hosted pre-conference workshops June 4 on current
legislation, the anti-hunger work of the Episcopal Church at the local
level, and grassroots organizing --described the conference as an important
call to action to fight hunger both at home and abroad. "We know there is
enough food to feed all the world's people," she said. "This conference is
about sustaining the political will to see that all are fed."
The ONE campaign, another effort by Americans to fight
extreme poverty as well as the global AIDS pandemic, has produced a video
that invites viewers to visit www.one.org to learn more about the crisis and
what they can do to make a difference. The ONE video features an all-star
cast including Presiding Bishop Griswold, Tom Hanks, Jamie Foxx, Cameron
Diaz, Al Pacino, Penelope Cruz, Benicio del Toro, Alfred Woodard, Rita
Wilson and George Clooney.
Further information about the One Table, Many Voices
conference is available at
www.onetableconference.org.
Matthew Davies
Episcopal News Service
Website:
www.episcopalchurch.org/ens |
| Jim Wallis of Sojourners
offers his take on the gathering as "a kairos moment on poverty"
[6-9-05] His emphasis was on the
broad spectrum of faith communities represented in the convocation on Monday
evening, June 6.
"The massive reality of global hunger and poverty has
revealed our own spiritual poverty and is bringing us together. The
religious leaders gathered at Washington's National Cathedral also have
different political views. But maybe soon overcoming poverty could become a
bipartisan issue and a nonpartisan cause."In a meeting with British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, in Washington to urge Pres. Bush to do more for Africa
development, he says "We spoke of how for the first time the world has the
knowledge, information, technology, and resources to substantially end
extreme poverty as we know it, but that what is still lacking is the moral
and political will to do so. And we agreed that to generate such moral will
is part of the job of the religious community."
His report >> |
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Visit
our lively
new website! |
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GA actions
ratified (or not) by the presbyteries
A number of the most important actions of the 219th
General Assembly have now been acted upon by the presbyteries,
confirming most of them as amendments to the PC(USA) Book of Order.
We provided resources to help inform the
reflection and debate, along with updates on the voting.
Our three areas of primary interest have been:
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Amendment 10-A,
which removes the current ban on
lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender persons being considered as
possible candidates for ordination as elder or ministers.
Approved! |
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Amendment 10-2,
which would add the Belhar Confession to our Book of
Confessions. Disapproved, because as an amendment
to the Book of Confessions it needed a 2/3 vote, and did not
receive that. |
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Amendment
10-1, which adopts the new Form of Government
that was approved by the Assembly. Approved. |
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If you like what
you find here,
we hope you'll help us keep Voices for Justice going ... and
growing!
Please consider making a special
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Click here to send a
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Or send your check, made
out to "Presbyterian Voices for Justice" and marked "web site," to
our PVJ Treasurer:
Darcy Hawk
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Gibsonia, PA 15044-8312 |
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Some blogs worth visiting |
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PVJ's
Facebook page
Mitch Trigger, PVJ's
Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where
Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and
views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both
personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!
You can post your own news and views,
or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you. |
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Voices of Sophia blog
Heather Reichgott, who has created
this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:
After fifteen years of scholarship
and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the
voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy,
students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers
and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God
in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God
through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through
articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and
thoughtful community. |
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John Harris’ Summit to
Shore blogspot
Theological and philosophical
reflections on everything between summit to shore, including
kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology,
politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New
York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive
New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the
Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian
Church in Flushing, NY. |
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John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive
A Presbyterian minister, currently
serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton,
Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized
and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and
lightening up. |
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Got more blogs to recommend?
Please
send a note, and we'll see what we can do! |
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