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Fighting Famine Isn't Enough

Some 2,000 Somalis die of starvation daily. Drought isn't the reason.

"Drought is an ecological disaster, born of little or no rain. Drought is weather-made. Famine is man-made. It's politically induced," said Brian Stiller, the new global ambassador for the World Evangelical Alliance, after his recent trip to Somalia.

Moved by the prospect that 750,000 Somalis may starve in coming months, Stiller and Aiah Foday-Khabenje, a Kenyan evangelical leader, flew to Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, to survey the situation.

Foreign Policy magazine recently ranked Somalia as the worst nation-state in the world. It cannot control its borders or feed its people, and has become a safe haven for pirates and terrorists. An October truck bomb killed 70 in Mogadishu. The Horn of Africa has never been as dysfunctional as it is now.

Describing Mogadishu, Stiller told Christianity Today, "It seemed like Berlin after the Second World War, just devastated, shot-down, broken-down, bombed-out. People scurry and scramble to scratch out an existence. You really feel like you are in a lawless land." A Somali warlord accompanied by five soldiers toting AK-47s befriended Stiller and Foday-Khabenje and escorted them throughout the city.

There is no question that Somalis, especially mothers and young children, are dying daily from starvation. On his tour, Stiller stopped by one tent in an overcrowded camp. A man had just delivered a rolled-up mat containing the corpse of a small child. "I looked outside the tent," said Stiller. "Here was a woman with her head on her knees, weeping. I thought, This is normal, until the man said, 'Sir, this is the third son she's lost this week.'"

Christians should not hesitate to feed the starving and care for the sick, homeless, and needy, no matter the cause of their suffering. After being chased out of Somalia in 2010, faith-based aid agencies have a critical role in border-area relief efforts. The Dadaab camp, for instance, is home to 400,000 refugees in Kenya just across the Somali border. There is a shortfall of $900 million in the estimated $3 billion of total aid needed in Somalia and the region.

But famine cannot be defeated by food aid alone. Brought on by war and other complex underlying causes, famine calls for Christians to develop a comprehensive response. The tyranny of urgently needed, short-term famine relief should not lessen our commitment to a big-picture agenda.

Stiller said, "We aren't naive when we look at Somalia. It's lawless, without fear." The leaders who hosted the two Christian men were puzzled about why they had come to Mogadishu. Stiller responded, "You matter to God."

The tyranny of urgently needed, short-term famine relief should not lessen our commitment to a big-picture agenda.

Yet such a statement can sound like a spiritual platitude if it isn't backed by Christians committed to political reform and something much more basic: spiritual and moral renewal. "The worst places are often the places that God is there by his Spirit working, conspiring to do the will of the Father. I just love being part of his conspiracy," Stiller said.

That sounds like music to the ears of every mission-minded Christian. But many of Somalia's new leaders are Islamic fundamentalists. They have no love for the gospel or the West. Somalia's 10 million people do not have a visible church. Little or no religious freedom exists, and the new government has no plan in place to provide it.

As Stiller and Foday-Khabenje cleared airport security in Mogadishu to return home, they saw a young Somali worker wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words, "This is true: John 3:16." "Do you know what's on your T-shirt?" Stiller asked.


From Issue:
November 2011, Vol. 55, No. 11, Pg 55, "Fighting Famine Isn't Enough"
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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 12 comments

Original Anna

November 08, 2011  10:55pm

We have a huge settlement of Somalians in a city a twenty minute drive from us. Somalia, like Jerusalem was basically Christian until the Muslims wanted the land. Now, thanks to the burning of churches and killing Christians on "rumours" of Christians disrespecting Islam, Somalians are starving to death after being burned out of their homes especially in the area in the north where the tribes are Christians. All the UN does is set up camps miles away from the tribes being attacked so those running die on the trip. No attempt by the UN or gov't military is made to stop the Muslims because the gov't is now run by Muslims. It's senseless for Christians to die in mass when they could benefit us here. And believe me, all the praying is not going to stop the Muslims when they want what you have. You gotta move or else. Christians dying for the faith is a waste as far as I'm concerned. It doesn't keep Christians on the land they had for centuries and it only encourages our enemy to conquer.

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CWC

November 07, 2011  1:58pm

TJ's comments are so well taken. We Western Christians fail to avail ourselves of the most powerful "weapon" --prayer. Prayers can accomplish the impossible. K tra--how is following Matthew 28:18-20 (ie., taking the gospel and relief supplies) to Somalia reducing God's blessing on America? "If you love me you will keep my commandments!" Your position is falsely dichotomous...it doesn't have to be either or..look at the airport worker with John 3:16 on his shirt! Original Anna--most Western Christians are asleep---and could care less about their own faith, much less that of people who have never heard the Gospel. I'm saddened to think you believe Somalia to be "lost." Yes in a fundamental sense the people are lost because they have not heard and responded to the Gospel, but the power of the Gospel brought the likes of me and you, and the apostle Paul--Paul, WHO PERSECUTED CHRISTIANS, to repentance and belief in an Almighty God, one who is stronger than "he who is in the world!

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Tj

November 07, 2011  8:00am

Odd that the most important function that Christians can perform was missing from the article; prayer. Somalia is a great example of an impossible situation that has but one solution, the intervention of God. Are Christians willing to invest in a siege of the throne of God in ceaseless petition for the dying masses or are we going to rely on the fallible and often faithless efforts of man?

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