Assalamu aleikum.

"For years, U.S. Christian evangelical organisations have been doing
charitable, relief and recruiting work in Africa. And it appears to
have paid off. In August 2004, The New Republic's Andrew Rice reported
that the World Christian Encyclopedia noted that while 17 million
Africans attended Pentecostal churches in 1970, that number had jumped
to "more than 125 million... roughly 19 percent of the continent's
population". And demographers were predicting that the continent's
Christian population will nearly double by 2025 to 633 million ... In
his new role at USAID, Paul Bonicelli is in a position to help ensure
that evangelical faith-based organisations, steeped in the reactionary
politics of the Christian Right, receive a lion's share of money from
Bush's Emergency Plan."

-

The sinister US "Bureau for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian
Assistance" (BDCHA) deploys its goons worldwide in order to
destabilize governments and societies that disagree with US policies.
It is but one agency of USAID. There are a dozen others, all working
to christianize Africa.

For background information on BDCHA, see also:

"Supporting Human Rights and Democracy: The U.S. Record 2002-2003"
http://wwwa.house.gov/international_relations/108/wint0709.htm


---


Christian Groups Find New Allies at USAID
Bill Berkowitz*
IPS
January 17, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=1801

OAKLAND, California, Jan 17 (IPS) - The AIDS pandemic in Africa has
provided an entry point for U.S.-based Christian evangelical
organisations that view some of the small countries in that continent
as an opportunity for religious, political and social transformation.

Working in concert with these groups is the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID). And that's where Paul Bonicelli
comes in.

In October, Bonicelli, the former dean of academic affairs at Patrick
Henry College -- a small fundamentalist Christian college located in
rural Virginia -- was appointed last October by the George W. Bush
administration to oversee USAID programmes as the new deputy assistant
administrator at the Bureau for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian
Assistance.

A USAID press release said his responsibilities "will focus on four
primary goals of strengthening the rule of law and respect for human
rights; promoting more genuine and competitive elections and political
processes; increasing development of a politically active civil
society; and implementing a more transparent and accountable governance."

While at first, Bonicelli's appointment appeared to be another example
of the Bush administration's propensity to fill important positions
with largely unqualified supporters, a posting at the Herescope blog
argued that his ties to Patrick Henry College made the selection of
Bonicelli highly significant "because USAID has been a major player in
the 'transformation' of the African continent".

Herescope pays close attention to the activities of major U.S.
Christian evangelical organisations in Africa, and its research places
the appointment of Paul Bonicelli in a broader political context.

Herescope is organised by the Discernment Research Group, a project of
Discernment Ministries, Inc. In 1989, long-time pastors Travers and
Jewel van der Merwe founded the ministry because they had become
"deeply concerned with what they perceived within the church as a
radical shift away from the authority of Scripture". Herescope is
dedicated to "revealing heresies and false teachings affecting the
Church today".

In December 2002, via an executive order from Pres. Bush, a Centre for
Faith-Based and Community Initiatives was established at USAID. The
USAID Centre, like the others created at more than a dozen other U.S.
agencies, aims to encourage faith-based groups to participate in its
initiatives.

In February 2004, Christianity Today magazine's deputy managing
editor, Timothy C. Morgan, interviewed Anne Peterson -- a former
missionary doctor to Zimbabwe and Zaire who was appointed by the Bush
administration as head of global health for USAID.

Among other issues, Morgan asked her about the administration's
policies regarding AIDS in Africa, and for a comment on the work
Christian evangelical groups were performing there.

Peterson said that "there's a huge role", for Christian groups
"because à [AIDS] is an issue that fits with the Christian message.
And the prevention of AIDS fits with the righteous living and moral
standpoint [of Christianity]."

"But equally important is the church's role in giving a message of
forgiveness, of compassion, of caring for the sick, of caring for the
widows and orphans," she added. "There's almost no part of the AIDS
epidemic where the faith orientation doesn't have a very, very strong
message."

A posting on the website of USAID underscores Peterson's remarks:
"Community and faith-based organisations have a critical role to play
in the provision of HIV/AIDS prevention, care and treatment," it says.

"They possess an extensive geographic reach and a well-developed
infrastructure in the developing world. This, in addition to their
unmatched staying power, makes them an invaluable asset in the fight
against the HIV/AIDS pandemic."

In his 2003 State of the Union address, Pres. Bush proposed spending
15 billion dollars fighting AIDS and other diseases in Africa over a
five-year period.

In June 2004, he told a Philadelphia audience: "I think our country
needs a practical, effective and moral message. In addition to other
kinds of prevention, we need to tell our children that abstinence is
the only certain way to avoid contracting HIV. It works every time."

Four months later, the administration announced that 100 million
dollars in new grants for abstinence-focused programmes -- as part of
the president's 15-billion-dollar Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief to
combat AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in 12 sub-Saharan African
nations, Haiti and Guyana -- went to 11 groups, including nine
faith-based organisations.

The Emergency Plan stresses abstinence and is built around the
controversial "ABC" approach, which stands for "Abstain, Be faithful,
or use a Condom."

Anne Peterson called ABC "a balanced approach" in an interview with
the Washington Times. She also admitted, however, that "it has
provoked great debate in the international public health community,
which for many years emphasised condom distribution over
behavior-change programmes".

A brochure on USAID website titled "Faith-Based Partnerships" pointed
out that a number of faith-based initiatives in Africa have been
undertaken by U.S. evangelical groups.

One of the projects listed among the examples of USAID partnerships
with faith-based organisations -- Dr. Bruce Wilkinson's Dream for
Africa based in Swaziland -- appears not to have turned out so well.

Swaziland, one of Africa's smallest counties, is located between
Mozambique and South Africa and has one of the world's highest
HIV/AIDS rates.

According to USAID, Wilkinson "has trained pastors on ways of talking
appropriately and effectively to their congregations about abstinence
until marriage, fidelity to one's partner, and reducing stigma.
Unequal treatment of women contributes to the spread of HIV/AIDS, so
he challenged pastors to make clear to their congregations that men
and women are, according to their own sacred text, created equal."

Wilkinson had hoped to build a 32,500-acre complex that "would house,
educate, and feed children whose parents had died of AIDS à [and]
would also have a golf course and other tourist attractions",
Christianity Today reported.

After his request for the land was criticised in the press and turned
down, Wilkinson, who received a great deal of positive publicity in
2002 when he left his home in Georgia and relocated to Africa to focus
on HIV/AIDS issues, decided to leave Africa. It has been reported that
he has quit his ministry as well.

For years, U.S. Christian evangelical organisations have been doing
charitable, relief and recruiting work in Africa. And it appears to
have paid off. In August 2004, The New Republic's Andrew Rice reported
that the World Christian Encyclopedia noted that while 17 million
Africans attended Pentecostal churches in 1970, that number had jumped
to "more than 125 million... roughly 19 percent of the continent's
population".

And demographers were predicting that the continent's Christian
population will nearly double by 2025 to 633 million.

Politically, that's good news for the Bush administration which, since
its war on Iraq, has lost more friends than it gained.

In his new role at USAID, Paul Bonicelli is in a position to help
ensure that evangelical faith-based organisations, steeped in the
reactionary politics of the Christian Right, receive a lion's share of
money from Bush's Emergency Plan.

*Bill Berkowitz is a longtime observer of the conservative movement.
His WorkingForChange column "Conservative Watch" documents the
strategies, players, institutions, victories and defeats of the U.S.
Right. (END/2006) 

http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=1801







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{Invite (mankind, O Muhammad ) to the Way of your Lord (i.e. Islam) with wisdom 
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{And who is better in speech than he who [says: "My Lord is Allah (believes in 
His Oneness)," and then stands straight (acts upon His Order), and] invites 
(men) to Allah's (Islamic Monotheism), and does righteous deeds, and says: "I 
am one of the Muslims."} (Holy Quran-41:33)
 
The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: "By Allah, if 
Allah guides one person by you, it is better for you than the best types of 
camels." [al-Bukhaaree, Muslim] 

The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)  also said, "Whoever 
calls to guidance will have a reward similar to the reward of the one who 
follows him, without the reward of either of them being lessened at all." 
[Muslim, Ahmad, Aboo Daawood, an-Nasaa'ee, at-Tirmidhee, Ibn Maajah] 
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