[UMNS-ALL-NEWS] UMNS# 337-Study guide offers steps on Darfur involvement

NewsDesk NewsDesk at UMCOM.ORG
Mon Aug 11 15:36:36 CDT 2008


Study guide offers steps on Darfur involvement 

Aug. 11, 2008    

NOTE: Photographs are available at http://umns.umc.org. 

By Wayne Rhodes* 

WASHINGTON (UMNS)-A biblically based study, developed to accompany a
best-selling book on the crisis in Darfur, is available to help the
Christian community mobilize against atrocities in Sudan.

Not on Our Watch Christian Companion: Biblical Reflections on the
Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond is an eight-week study
written by Bill Mefford, director of civil and human rights for the
United Methodist Board of Church and Society, and Greg Leffel, president
of One Horizon Foundation.

The authors, who are receiving no payment for their work, told an Aug. 7
press briefing conducted at The United Methodist Building across from
the U.S. Capitol that they intended to create a resource that crossed
all theological lines in the Christian community.

"We wanted to provide biblical reflections that enable people to think
through how to respond to genocide," said Leffel. "We hope to raise
awareness about why it's right to be involved in this issue in the first
place and how to become organized. We tried to link Christian traditions
to the wider movement against genocide."

Mefford said the authors wanted to stay away from abstract, theological
detachment. "We tried to make it as personal as possible," he explained,
citing stories of Darfur refugees and aid workers that are in the study
guide. "The most powerful part of the Christian Companion are the steps
people will take to get engaged."

Weekly study guide 

Each chapter of the Christian Companion constitutes a weekly study
designed to guide group discussion and reflection about Darfur and the
movement to end genocide. Each session includes a biblical passage for
reflection, a lesson applying the passage to Darfur, a weekly action
step, and vignettes by refugees, activists and Christians who have
awakened to the problem of genocide. 

Human rights activist John Prendergast, who wrote the book, Not on Our
Watch: The Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond with Academy
Award winning actor Don Cheadle, took part in the press briefing. He
said the Christian Companion is needed now because no audience is more
vital and viable than its faith-based target readers.

"Genocide is a crime with no equal, the ultimate crime against
humanity," said Prendergast, co-chairperson of the ENOUGH Project to end
genocide and crimes against humanity. During the Clinton administration,
he was involved in peace processes in Africa while director of African
Affairs at the National Security Council and special adviser at the U.S.
Department of State. "Genocide demands response," he said.

For the first time in history, a mass movement is developing against
genocide, according to Prendergast. He pointed out that there was no
answer by other nations during Nazi Germany's Holocaust in the 1930s and
1940s, Pol Pot's killing fields in Cambodia in the 1970s or the Hutu
massacres in Rwanda in the 1990s.

"Despite the mass movement's growth, genocide rages on," Prendergast
said. "Our goal is to build a permanent constituency among the
faith-based communities to address genocide wherever it happens, to help
ensure that the United States will do all it can to prevent genocide."

Step-by-step process 

Leffel and Mefford structured the Christian Companion to provide a
step-by-step process to get involved through a "reflection/action"
format. Leffel said there are steps to follow and resources to connect
to others opposing genocide as well.

Both authors are graduates of Asbury Theological Seminary. Leffel is
president of One Horizon Foundation and co-founder of Communality, a
Christian missional community in Lexington, Ky. He holds a doctorate in
intercultural studies from Asbury and is author of Faith Seeking Action:
Mission, Social Movements and the Church in Motion. 

Mefford earned a doctorate in missiology from Asbury. In his position
with Church and Society, he works primarily on the issues of
immigration, refugees, criminal justice reform, and abolition of the
death penalty and torture.

The Not on Our Watch Christian Companion is available in paperback and
sells for $7.50. Copies can be ordered through
http://www.darfurchristianaction.org
<http://www.darfurchristianaction.org/>  online. The Web site includes
activities to accompany the resource.

The Christian Companion was published by The ENOUGH Project in
association with the Board of Church and Society and One Horizon
Foundation. ENOUGH is a project of the Center for American Progress to
end genocide and crimes against humanity. It was founded in 2007 with an
initial focus on the crises in Sudan, Chad, eastern Congo, northern
Uganda and Somalia. 

*Rhodes is director of communications for the Board of Church and
Society. 

News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or
newsdesk at umcom.org. 

******************** 

United Methodist News Service 
Photos and stories also available at: 
http://umns.umc.org 




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