General joins call to end extreme poverty by 2030
1 May 2015
The Salvation Army's world leader, General André Cox, has joined more than 30 leaders from major world religions and heads of global faith-based organisations to launch a call to action to end extreme poverty by 2030 – a goal shared by the World Bank Group.
General Cox added his signature to a statement that was released on 9 April. The joint statement, Ending Extreme Poverty: A Moral and Spiritual Imperative, (www.salvationarmy.org/thegeneral/endingextremepoverty) notes that remarkable recent progress has been made in reducing extreme poverty.
Over 25 years the world has gone from nearly two billion people living in extreme poverty to fewer than one billion. Now, the statement explains, for the first time in human history there exists both the capacity and moral responsibility to ensure that no one has to live in extreme poverty’s grip.
Endorsers are committed to gaining greater commitment and action from within the faith community globally and across every sector to end extreme poverty.
For The Salvation Army, this is an opportunity to join forces with people of faith from around the world as it continues a battle against poverty that has been a vital aspect of its mission throughout its 150-year history.
“The Salvation Army will continue to engage with policy makers and will seek to work in strategic partnerships with like-minded people in order to make this dream a reality,” General Cox said. “Much of what we do now and many of our development programs around the world are actively supporting these ideals and goals.”
Uplifting the poor
The announcement from global faith leaders arose from the World Bank’s “Faith Based and Religious Leaders Round Table” held on 18 February – the first high-level meeting between World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim and faith leaders.
Commissioner Charles Swansbury, International Secretary for Program Resources at International Headquarters, London, represented The Salvation Army.
“We have ample evidence from the World Bank Group and others showing that we can now end extreme poverty within 15 years,” the Moral Imperative statement notes.
“In 2015, our governments will be deciding upon a new global sustainable development agenda that has the potential to build on our shared values to finish the urgent task of ending extreme poverty.
“We in the faith community embrace this moral imperative because we share the belief that the moral test of our society is how the weakest and most vulnerable are faring. Our sacred texts also call us to combat injustice and uplift the poorest in our midst.”
The Moral Imperative statement seeks to generate the necessary social and political will by inspiring greater commitments from others to join in this cause, tapping into many of the shared convictions and beliefs that unify the world’s major religions around the call and responsibility to combat poverty.
Common goal
In a speech at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington before the World Bank/IMF Spring Meetings, World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim spoke about almost a billion people who live in what is classed as “extreme poverty” – surviving on about $1 a day.
“Few of us,” he said, “can’t even imagine what this must be like. Let’s remember what poverty is. Poverty is 2.5 billion people not having access to financial accounts. Poverty is 1.4 billion people without access to electricity. Poverty is also putting your children to bed without food. And poverty is not going to school because everyone in the family needs to earn a few cents each day.”
Responding to the launch of the moral imperative, he added: “Faith leaders and the World Bank Group share a common goal – to realise a world free of extreme poverty in just 15 years. The moral imperative can help drive the movement to end poverty by 2030 by inspiring large communities to act now and to advocate for governments to do the same. These commitments from religious leaders come at just the right time – their actions can help hundreds of millions of people lift themselves out of poverty.”
Comments
No comments yet - be the first.