Today, we
present our ELCA Advocacy Update for the month of April. Please read below for important information on ELCA Advocacy efforts in
Washington, across the country and throughout the world. To read the full
version of the update and for more information on advocacy efforts from our
Lutheran State Advocacy offices, visit our blog!
Advocacy
Update - April 2016
ELCA Advocacy, Washington D.C.
ELCAVOTES!: ELCA Advocacy, along with Young Adult
Ministry and Racial Justice Ministries, officially launched the ELCAvotes!
initiative, and the website is now
live. Lutherans can
access a number of resources, including Bible studies and discussion guides as
part of a toolkit developed to focus on civic participation, voting rights and
racial justice. As part of the initiative, 20 individuals from across the
country received scholarships to attend Ecumenical Advocacy Days April 15-18 in
Washington, D.C. With the event’s theme “Lift Every Voice! – Racism, Class, and
Power,” Lutherans will engage alongside other participants in education,
worship and advocacy.
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY: On
International Women’s Day, ELCA Advocacy encouraged support for the International
Violence Against Women Act. The legislation, which is pending in Congress, would
enable the U.S. government to develop faster and more efficient responses to
violence against women in humanitarian emergencies. Globally, an estimated 1-in-3
women will experience physical, sexual and psychological abuse in their
lifetime. Advocates
can take action at the ELCA Action
Center.
EL
SALVADOR UPDATE: Alaide
Vilchis Ibarra, Assistant Director for Migration Policy and Advocacy, traveled
to El Salvador for the first Ecumenical Conference for Peace and
Reconciliation. The Salvadoran government has responded to the incredibly high
murder rate in the country, similar to rates during its civil war, with
militarization and the criminalization of anyone involved with gangs. Earlier
this year, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees released a plan to protect Central
Americans and work with the governments in the region to ensure that they
improve their ability to provide protection. Although the plan is
comprehensive, no countries have agreed to help pay for these critical tasks.
MIGRATION AND
VOTING: Several synods and interfaith leaders have expressed
concerns about vitriolic rhetoric directed at immigrants and refugees during
the current election campaigns. ELCA Advocacy encouraged
Lutherans to join a webinar earlier in March, explaining
how congregations can share tools and strategies to support and engage
immigrant and refugee communities.
METHANE STANDARDS:
ELCA Advocacy
announced support for a proposed methane standard. This long
anticipated plan would help reduce natural gas waste on tribal and publicly
owned lands. The proposal, created by the U.S. Department of the Interior, is
expected to be approved by the end of this administration. If passed, the safer
standard will help stop the frequency of dangerous methane leaks, which pollute
communities, and will lessen our contributions to climate change. The proposal
is open for public comments until Earth Day, April 22.
Lutheran Office for World Community, New York,
N.Y.
ECUMENICAL WOMEN: Ecumenical Women is a
coalition of 18 congregations and ecumenical organizations accredited with the
United Nations, including The Lutheran World Federation. On Saturday, March 12,
Ecumenical Women held an orientation for its approximately 160 delegates to the
60th Commission on the Status of Women (CSW). During this orientation, Under-Secretary-General and
Executive Director of U.N. Women Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka spoke about the
importance of this being the first commission held after the adoption of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development in
2015 and thanked faith-based organizations for their work on the agenda. Maria
Cristina Rendón of The Lutheran World Federation moderated a panel on the role
of women’s empowerment in the implementation of the sustainable development goals.
Throughout the week, Ecumenical Women delegates had the opportunity to meet
with member states to discuss gender justice and the sustainable development goals.
Overall, member organizations of Ecumenical Women organized and sponsored more
than 20 events during the CSW.
Both Nicholas Jaech of the Lutheran Office for World
Community (LOWC), the communications chair for Ecumenical Women, and Christine
Mangale of LOWC, the coalition’s treasurer, were keys to the success of
Ecumenical Women during the event. You can learn more about the work of Ecumenical
Women during the two weeks of the commission by checking out their Twitter page.
LUTHERAN DELGATION:
LOWC welcomed 36 delegates to the Commission
on the Status of Women this year. These delegates joined us from Lutheran
churches in Brazil, Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, Madagascar,
Malawi, Malaysia, Mexico, Swaziland, Switzerland and the United States. The Lutherans
came together on Sunday, March 13, for a day of learning about global Lutheran
programs on gender justice, as well as an opportunity to learn more about each
other. That evening, the Lutheran delegates worshiped at the beautifully unique
Jazz Vespers at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church. During their time at the commission,
the Lutheran delegates were able to attend U.N. events and meet with government
representatives from their home countries. On the third day, the Lutheran
delegates led morning worship at the Church Center for the United Nations.
LUTHERAN-ORGANIZED AND
CO-SPONSORED EVENTS AT CSW: LOWC organized and
co-sponsored four events on role of faith-based organizations in sustainable
development and addressing gender-based violence. At these events, Lutheran
delegates, particularly the international delegates, had the opportunity to
share their experiences on the role of the church in gender justice.
On Tuesday, March 15, Dennis
Frado, director of LOWC, moderated a CSW parallel event, “Forced Migration,
Human Trafficking, and Child Soldiers: How ISIL [the so-called “Islamic State
in Iraq and the Levant”] is Exploiting the Conflict in the Middle East.” A
diverse and superb group of panelists spoke on the topic: Li Fung, office of
the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict; Shafferan Sonneveld,
Muslims for Progressive Values; Edward Flynn, U.N. Counter-Terrorism Executive
Directorate; and Emeka Obiezu, Augustinians International and the U.N. Nongovernmental
Organization Committee on Migration. Particularly valuable was a contribution
of Sonneveld, who noted that she and her organization use “the word Da’esh
instead of ISIS because what they [Da’esh] are doing does not represent Islam”
in any way. She also pointed out the misuse of Quranic scripture by Da’esh. Fung
stressed the importance of upholding international human rights and
humanitarian law.
The other events included:
Monday, March 14: “Developing
a Common Feminist Faith Discourse to Achieve Gender Equality.” During this
event, the Rev. Cibele Kuss, executive director of the Lutheran Foundation of Diakonia
in Brazil, discussed how a feminist faith discourse can help to achieve gender
justice.
Tuesday, March 15, at “Women
and Tech: Effective Video Documentation of Sexual Violence – Lessons Learned,”
the Rev. Yumba Wa Nkulu Solange from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in (the
Democratic Republic of) Congo and Doo Aphane of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in Southern Africa shared their experiences.
Wednesday,
March 16: “Engaging Faith Communities to Implement SDGs – Achieving Gender
Justice And Eliminating Violence Against Women and Girls.” During this event, the
Rev. Cibele Kuss of Brazil also spoke.
Also on Wednesday: “Faith at
the Crossroads of Sustainable Development and Sustained Gender-based Violence.”
During this event, the Rev. Julinda Sipayung of the Simalungun Protestant
Christian Church (Gereja Kristen Protestan Simalungun) in Indonesia, the Rev.
Margaret Kelly of the ELCA, and Mabel Madinga of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Malawi shared their experiences.
Lutheran state advocacy efforts across the
country
Find out all about the
vast and incredibly important work of Lutheran advocates across the country by
visiting our ELCA Advocacy Blog.
(To view this email in web format, click here.)