NEWS STORY — 28
FEBRUARY 2014
Mormon Representatives Discuss Church Humanitarian Efforts
at the United Nations
SALT LAKE CITY —
Representatives of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints addressed the role of the Church’s global humanitarian outreach efforts
at a meeting at the United Nations in New York City on 27 February 2014. The gathering was part of the Focus on Faith
series of the Nongovernmental Organizations (NGO) Relations and Advocacy
Section of the U.N.’s Department of Public Information (DPI). The U.N.
officially recognized the Church as an NGO several years ago.
This first meeting of its kind at the U.N. dedicated
exclusively to the Church was titled “Discovering Mormonism and Its Role in
Humanitarian Assistance.” Those representing the Church included Sharon Eubank, director of Humanitarian
Services and LDS Charities; Ahmad Corbitt, senior manager of public affairs in
New York; and Elder Phil Colton, who, along with his wife, Barbara, is serving
as a public affairs missionary interacting with the U.N.
Eubank told a story of how Dutch potatoes were sent to
Germany in November 1947 following World War II, even though bitter feelings
existed between the peoples of Holland and Germany. “Mormon potato patches
sprang up in the backyards, road medians, vacant lots and former flower
gardens,” she said. The warehouse soon held 70 tons of potatoes, five times
what the export permit of the expected 15 tons would allow. “It’s one thing to
talk about brotherhood. It’s another thing to actually act like brothers.”
“Charity is more than aid,” explained Eubank. She said the
example of the Dutch potato story “creates some foundational planks in the
platform of LDS Charities. It emphasizes dignity, human worth, cooperation,
unity, sacrifice and the assurance that no one is too poor or too disabled or
too marginalized to contribute something of value.” She highlighted some of the
projects of today, including hygiene kit production in Jordan, peer group mobility
training in Nepal and family nutrition in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The primary purpose of LDS Charities is to relieve
suffering, foster self-reliance and provide opportunities for service for
families of all nationalities and religions. Eubank said the organization is
self-funded from donations, with most of those contributions less than $50
each. She said the “unique approach” relies mostly on volunteers. There are 36
paid employees, including 16 staff members in Salt Lake City and 20 others in
16 area offices in major cities of Argentina, South Africa, Germany, Russia,
Jordan (administered in Salt Lake City), Philippines, Japan, New Zealand, Peru,
Guatemala, China, Mexico, Brazil and the Dominican Republic.
“We work with lots and lots of partners,” said Eubank. She
mentioned organizations such as Rotary International, Islamic Relief, Catholic
Relief Services, World Health Organization, U.N. High Commission for Refugees
and others.
Eubank reported that in 2013 LDS Charities provided $84
million in total assistance to individuals in 130 countries. “Faiths and
religions are central to achieving common goals and transformational change,”
said Eubank.
Initiatives of LDS Charities in 2013 include clean water
(560,000 people in 37 countries), neonatal resuscitation (28,000 people in 37
countries), vision care (89,000 people in 34 countries), wheelchair
distribution (66,000 people in 55 countries), family gardens (35,000 people in
20 countries), immunizations (18 projects in 12 countries) and emergency
response (103 projects in 54 countries).
Elder Colton, a nuclear physicist who retired from the U.N.
in 1999 and the State Department in 2000, spent several years in Southeast Asia
supervising hundreds of humanitarian projects. “LDS Charities is making a real
difference in people’s lives,” he said. “There is a basic desire by all men to
help [each other].”
Elder Colton said global poverty continues to decline and
childhood deaths have dropped dramatically due to the “hard work on the U.N.’s
Millennium Development Goals from people throughout the world.” “We look
forward, my wife and I, to work in the U.N. system to achieve the goals that we
are here for today,” he added. “We promise that we will work better and smarter
through your guidance. We hope to be invited [to speak] another time.”
Corbitt told a crowded room that Church priorities
“correspond with U.N. priorities.” “We respect everyone’s religious freedom,”
he said.