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May 21, 2006

the one campaign

THE ONE DECLARATION
“WE BELIEVE that in the best American tradition of helping others help themselves, now is the time to join with other countries in a historic pact for compassion and justice to help the poorest of the world overcome AIDS and extreme poverty. WE RECOGNIZE that a pact including such measures as fair trade, debt relief, fighting corruption and directing additional resources for basic needs – education, health, clean water, food, and care for orphans – would transform the futures and hopes of an entire generation in the poorest countries, at a cost equal to just one percent more of the US budget. WE COMMIT ourselves – one person, one voice, one vote at a time – to make a better, safer world for all.” http://one.org

Fact Sheet: AIDS and Extreme Poverty
AIDS AND EXTREME POVERTY: CRISIS AND OPPORTUNITY
The Emergency: AIDS and Extreme Poverty
· More than 1 billion people around the world live on less than $1 a day.
· A child dies every three seconds from AIDS and extreme poverty.
· Africa has been hit harder by the HIV/AIDS virus than any other region of the world. Sub-Saharan Africa is home to over 70% of the total world HIV-positive population.
· Over one billion people do not have access to clean water.
The Opportunity: What are we already doing to help?
· Thanks to U.S. support, over 400,000 people with HIV/AIDS are receiving lifesaving anti-retroviral treatment and at least another 500,000 would also receive such assistance in 2006 if the U.S. approves at least $3.6b for HIV/AIDS in its budget.
· The U.S. is a lead donor to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria which to date has provided bed-nets to 3 million families which will prevent those family members from contracting malaria from a simple mosquito bite. The U.S. has partnered with other G8 nations and committed to scaling up efforts to fight malaria together so that an additional 600,000 lives will be saved each year by 2015.
· This year, under pressure from the ONE: The Campaign to Make Poverty History, the G8 agreed to increase aid to Africa by $25b, and to all developing countries by $50b, by 2010. The G8 leaders and the other shareholders of the World Bank and IMF also agreed to cancel 100% of the multilateral debts owed by 18 qualified Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs). This will help kick-start poor countries efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals-but more will be needed if these goals are to be achieved and these promises will only be kept if we keep up the pressure.
What more can we do?
· For every $100 the U.S. government spent in 2004, only 25-50 cents was spent on the poorest countries of the world. When asked, most Americans think we are spending $15-20, not 25-50 cents, on international assistance. However, with just a 1% increase-or another $1 for every $100, the U.S. could lead a global effort to help poor countries meet international development targets.
· Experts agree that investing in education is one of the best ways to reduce poverty and fight the spread of AIDS, especially among girls. For less than the amount of money that Europeans and Americans spend on pet food every year, basic education could be provided for every child in the world.
· Economists estimate that creating fairer trade policies between the richest and poorest countries of the world could lift 300 million people out of poverty by 2015. http://one.org/Issues.html


Fact Sheet: More and Better Aid

YOU SHOULD KNOW...
In 2003, the rich countries of the world gave $24 billion in aid to Africa. This money has helped tremendously, but to achieve the millennium Goals and reduce poverty by half, Africa will need an additional $25 billion by 2010. (Commission for Africa)
In 1970, wealthy nations agreed to a goal of spending 0.7% of GNP on development assistance. In 2004, these countries spent on average just 0.25% (OECD)
International assistance saves lives, directly helping and empowering individuals to help themselves. Increasing international assistance by an amount equal to just ONE percent of the U.S. budget will:
· Prevent 10 million children from becoming AIDS orphans
· Help get 104 million children into grade school
· Provide water to almost 900 million people around the globe.
· Save almost 6.5 million children under 5 from preventable deaths
· Build a better, safer world for all.
Directing an additional ONE percent of the U.S. budget - roughly $25 billion -- will allow for longer-term sustainable growth while fighting the corruption that wastes precious resources. Together as ONE, we can transform the futures and hopes of an entire generation.
With ONE voice, we ask America to commit just ONE more percent of the U.S. budget to fight AIDS and extreme poverty.
Initially, American support will go to poor countries that fight corruption and use their own resources to help their people out of poverty. American leadership in debt cancellation will provide an example for rich countries in Europe and Asia to do their fair share to help the poorest people in the world.
This goal will not be achieved through business as usual. It will take Presidential leadership and strong Congressional backing. It is going to take new bipartisan commitments, political will and a movement of Americans who loudly call for and support such action.
It's going to take ONE voice, YOURS!
The Opportunity: Every year President Bush and Congress determine how much the U.S. government will spend the following year. That means right now there is an opportunity to move closer to our goal -- directing an additional 1%, or roughly $25 billion -- to fight global AIDS and extreme poverty. Sign up at www.one.org for more information on when to take action. http://one.org/Issues.html

Fact Sheet: Trade Justice
YOU SHOULD KNOW...
In 1980 Africa had 6% share of world trade. By 2002 this had dropped to just 2% despite the fact that Africa has 12% of the world’s population. If Africa could regain just an additional 1% share of global trade, it would earn $70 billion more each year, several times more than what the region currently receives in effective international assistance.
Poor countries cannot trade their way out of poverty without a level playing field. Right now, trade rules are so skewed that cows in Europe receive more a day in subsidies than half the population of Africa
While effective development assistance is appreciated by poor countries and people around the world, no one wants to rely on a handout. Poor countries want to trade their way out of poverty, but international rules make it extremely difficult. A fair trade system would give people in poor countries the chance to earn their way out of poverty by participating in the world economy.
Increased access to trade will allow poor countries to build their economies, start to stand on their own and ensure education, healthcare, and clean water for all. It will create pride and honor for the people, as their country begins to succeed its way out of struggle. But this will only happen if farmers, entrepreneurs and shopkeepers can sell their goods at a fair price.
We must open up developed country agricultural markets and eliminate subsidies that cause overproduction and commodity dumping by developed countries. Developing countries need to have the power to decide their own trade policies, in accordance with their development strategies and policies. All nations should also have a seat at the table in any trade negotiations, ensuring a transparent and democratic process. Meaningful trade capacity building assistance also increases developing countries' ability to produce competitive products so that once the rules are changed, countries can take advantage of new trading opportunities and earn the resources needed to fight poverty. Lastly, we must also work to prevent any possible unintended negative consequences of trade liberalization for poor and vulnerable people.
THE OPPORTUNITY...Trade negotiations are an opportunity for developed nations to keep their promises and demonstrate bold leadership by changing global trade rules to level the playing field for developing countries, giving people the tools to trade their way out of poverty—lifting up their own communities, their countries and eventually the global economy. Countries need to come to agreement on ensuring greater trade justice for poor nations as the World Trade Organization's "development" round nears its end. http://one.org/Issues.html

Fact Sheet: Debt Cancellation
YOU SHOULD KNOW...
43 African countries are getting some debt relief through the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) program. This program gives poor countries almost an extra billion dollars a year to spend on health care and education – money that increases access to education, immunizations and clean water.
Even so, right now very poor indebted countries continue to spend over a billion dollars a year repaying debts.
Each year, many countries spend more paying back debt than on health care or education. Why? Decades of loans have been given without much thought to how countries could pay them back. Some of the loans went to prop up governments or military regimes that are now long gone. Some of the loans were wasted by the governments that received them. Some were given by rich countries in ways that served their own self-interest.
Whatever the reason, today the poorest countries are saddled with debts they have to pay back at the expense of their own people. Some countries, including the U.S., UK, France and Germany, are taking progressive steps by canceling all the debt owed by these countries. Donors have begun to discuss the goal of 100% multilateral debt relief for the poorest countries which would free them of approximately $900 million in debt service payments each year.
As ONE, we are asking America to cancel 100% of the debts owed by the poorest countries.
In June 2005, the G8 agreed to write off $40 billion dollars of debt owed by 18 of the world's poorest countries. The G8 also promised that this debt cancellation could be extended to 20 more countries. The debt cancellation deal covers debts to the World Bank, African Development Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
Debt cancellation makes a difference! Mozambique introduced free life-saving immunizations for children; Tanzania abolished primary school fees, leading to a 66% increase in attendance, and in Uganda, debt relief gave 2.2 million people access to clean water.
The Opportunity: Together as ONE, we have helped do something incredible! In June 2005, the Group of Eight wealthiest nations (the G8) agreed to free millions of people in some of the poorest countries from crushing debts. This is a great first step but we need to make sure that world leaders keep their promises while extending 100% debt cancellation to all the poorest countries. http://one.org/Issues.html

May 18, 2006

breath

My son is 18 days old today! The night Chase was born, Shelly was asleep in the hospital room, and I was holding Chase. I’d only “known” him for 10 hours. Sure I had anticipated his arrival for months, I’d spoken to him, felt him kicking in the tummy, but I had only seen him, touched him, smelled him, and held him during those last 10 hours – yet I knew that there was nothing I wouldn’t do for him!

My prayer, as I had been anticipating Chase’s arrival, was that being a father would give me new and fresh insight into my relationship with God. That somehow, by being a father, I could more fully comprehend God’s unconditional love for me. As I held my son in my arms, smelled his sweet baby breath, I knew that there was absolutely nothing he could ever do that would change my love for him. My love for him was so incredible; this was 2½ weeks ago, when I was holding my 10-hour-old son! I stood there in the hospital room praying to God, thanking him for Chase, and for answering my prayer – that I was beginning to better understand God’s love for me.

If this was how I felt, after being a father for 10 hours, how much more perfectly and strongly, does God feel this about me, about us?

Psalm 139:13
13 You alone created my inner being.
You knitted me together inside my mother.
14 I will give thanks to you
because I have been so amazingly and miraculously made.
Your works are miraculous, and my soul is fully aware of this.
15 My bones were not hidden from you
when I was being made in secret,
when I was being skillfully woven in an underground workshop.
16 Your eyes saw me when I was only a fetus.
Every day of my life was recorded in your book
before one of them had taken place.
17 How precious are your thoughts concerning me, O God!
How vast in number are they!
18 If I try to count them,
there would be more of them than there are grains of sand.
When I wake up, I am still with you.

Have you ever thought about how long has God loved you?

I know that a memory that I will take with me until the day that I die, vivid and clear, is the serenity, calmness, love and compassion I felt at 10 PM on April 29th, 2006 holding my son – smelling his breath, watching him breathe. With that in mind, think for a few minutes about the breath of God. In Genesis 2:7 it tells us that the LORD God formed the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being. How powerful is the breath of God? Isaiah 33:11 says that God’s breath is a consuming fire. Acts 17:25 says God himself gives all men life and breath and everything else. Our God is the reason that we have breath.

Think about Jesus for a minute. The Bible tells us that Jesus was with God in the beginning. In John it says that through him (Jesus) all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. Do you ever think about the breath of Jesus? Mark 15:37 reads, With a loud cry, Jesus breathed his last. Luke 23:46 further describes, Jesus called out with a loud voice, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” When he had said this, he breathed his last. Can you even imagine God here? He is watching his son breath his last breathe. The powerful breath that had breathed life into existence – now breathed its last here, to once again breath life into existence.

How vivid and clear is this memory for God? Is it one of serenity, calmness, love and compassion like mine was on April 29th?

Have you ever thought about how much God loves you? Enough to watch his first born son breath his last breathe. It is true; I better understand God’s love for me, for us. Remember the breath.

May 11, 2006

kauai here we come!

Hale Mahana Kai.jpg
Well the Enyarts and Kettles are passing on Yosemite as our family vacation destination this summer to check out Hawaii. The plan was several years in the making, but Kauai here we come! http://www.gloriasvacationrentals.com/mahanakaimain/mahanakaimain.html

Hale Mahana Kai is a newly constructed, luxury residence on beautiful Kukui'ula Bay in the Poipu area. The home has three oceanfront bedrooms and 3.5 baths in a stunning, private setting. The large downstairs area encompasses the living room, kitchen, and dining area, and opens to a spacious covered lanai where whales, dolphins and sea turtles can be viewed. Barbecue on the lanai, watch the beautiful sunsets and enjoy the starry nights while falling asleep to the wonderful sounds of the ocean. All bedrooms are oceanfront, have lanais, televisions, and private baths.

The fully equipped kitchen features granite countertops, with a center island with bar stools facing the water. The dining area, which seats 6, is open to a living room featuring an entertainment center with indoor/outdoor sound system, DVD/CD/VCR and Television. High ceilings, hardwood floors, and island style furnishings and accents complement the setting. The garage, with remote entry, provides privacy and convenient access to the home.

The home is across the street from the National Tropical Botanical Gardens visitor center. Beaches at Kukui'ula Harbor, Poipu Beach Park, Brennecke's and others are minutes away. Spouting Horn, with it's famous blowhole and outdoor shop, is just a short walk up the road. Snorkeling is nearby at both Koloa Landing as well as adjacent to the Beach House Restaurant. Tennis, golf (including Poipu Bay, home of PGA Grand Slam), and excellent surfing are within minutes, yet the setting is very private. Fine dining abounds, ranging from elegant to casual, garden settings to oceanfront.

This home can be rented with 2 or 3 bedrooms; the third bedroom has private access as well as a kitchenette, queen bed, and full size sofa sleeper. The living room couch is a queen sleeper bed as well to accommodate larger families or groups. The master oceanfront bedrooms have king and queen beds respectively.

View the Hale Mahana Kai house here: http://www.gloriasvacationrentals.com/mahanakaimain/mahanakaimain_vt.html

May 10, 2006

center

Question: What is the shortest chapter in the Bible?
Answer: Psalm 117

Question: What is the longest chapter in the Bible?
Answer: Psalm 119

Question: Which chapter is in the center of the Bible?
Answer: Psalm 118

There are 594 chapters before Psalm 118.
There are 594 chapters after Psalm 118.
Add these up and you get 1188.

Question: What is the center verse in the Bible?
Answer: Psalm 118:8

Question: Does this verse say something significant about God's perfect will for our lives?

The next time someone says they would like to find God's perfect will for their lives and that they want to be in the center of his will, send them to the center of his Word.

Psalm 118:8 "It is better to take refuge in the LORD than to trust in man."

Isn't that odd how this worked out? (Or was God in the center of it?)

May 02, 2006

chase griffith enyart

Chase arrived Saturday, April 29th at 2:19 pm. He was 21 inches long and weighed 8 pounds, 5 ounces. Check him out in the photo album!