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Katherine Marshall

Faith in Action

Katherine Marshall

Katherine Marshall is senior fellow at Georgetown University's Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, and Director of the World Faiths Development Dialogue. Her blog, Faith in Action, tracks the activities of people of faith across the globe and across religious traditions. It maps their engagement around critical issues, from global health to the environment -- from AIDS to zebras. It explores the struggles, alliances, and common efforts of people of faith, public and private, local and global. And it highlights how important it is for Americans to look beyond their borders and to appreciate the struggles of the "bottom billion" people in today's globalized world. Her long career with the World Bank (1971-2006) involved a wide range of leadership assignments on issues of international development, with a focus on issues facing the world's poorest countries. From 2000-2006 she served as a counselor to the World Bank's President on ethics, values, and faith in development work. She is the author of several books including "Development and Faith: Where Mind, Heart and Soul work Together." Close.

Faith in Action

Katherine Marshall

Katherine Marshall is a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs and Visiting Professor. Her blog, Faith in Action, tracks the activities of people of faith across the globe and across religious traditions. Full bio »

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Food Crisis Solutions? Look to Canadians

The global food crisis came like a tsunami, with amazing speed and stealth. Development institutions everywhere are scrambling to face the urgent problems and questions that come in its wake.

There’s the immediate problem: How to find funds to buy enough food to meet steep increases in demand to feed hungry people here and now.

Then come longer term solutions. Feeding people obviously dominates today’s discussions, but the crisis runs so deep and broad that it demands serious rethinking of approaches and assumptions about how food is produced and marketed and about how to address factors like changing consumption demands and climate change.

Faith-inspired organizations are in the thick of this melee. They spotted it coming months ago, as most people were just beginning to notice creeping grocery bills. As my post on March 20 observed, in soup kitchens, food stamp centers, and food for work programs, across the world, the lines got longer, drawing people who had not needed help before. Now these organizations are passionately advocating for urgent action, to fund programs and lift bottlenecks that stop food reaching those in need. They are, at the same time, shifting gears to the development implications: how to increase production and fix obviously distorted global food markets.

Earlier this week, I spoke to Jim Cornelius, executive director of the Canadian Foodgrains Bank. The history of his program, which is in the thick of the policy debate up north, tells part of this faith food story.

Mennonites were among the first in Canada to provide food aid. In the 1920s, North American Russian farmers sent food aid to people in Eastern European who were hungry as the result of the Russian Revolution. They were practical farmers, so when they heard that members of their church were starving in Ukraine, they loaded surplus grain into containers and shipped it off. This was in the 1970s, and with successive crises the programs grew and became an integral part of Canada’s government food aid programs. In 1976, amid growing world food needs and a bountiful harvest, the Mennonite Central Committee launched a pilot project that eventually drew in other church agencies, and became the Canadian Foodgrains Bank. In 2007, it provided almost a million tons of food in more than 80 countries around the world. Today, 15 church agencies, representing over 9,000 congregations, are Canadian Foodgrains Bank members.

Three things struck me about discussions with these pragmatic Canadians.

First, they are proud that Canada’s food aid program is progressive, and completely untied. That means that the food aid, including the Foodgrains Bank, buys food on the market where they can get it fastest and cheapest. They can buy anywhere except in countries that do not have untied aid (that means the United States above all). There seems to be little argument about this up north.

Second, their church connections give them practical grounding and a wealth of information. They have keen antennae about where the crisis will strike next and the means to use them.

Third, the here and now is grafted to their policy thinking: soup kitchens now, better drip irrigation tomorrow; food stamps now, farmer cooperatives tomorrow; containers loaded on ships today, better drought proofing for crops down the road.

In the space of a few hours last week, Cornelius shifted gears from the global food crisis to the horrific situation in Burma. The passion and compassion that faith institutions bring has never been more urgently needed.

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