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AIDS Educator Says "Hope Changes Everything"


CHICAGO, IL (April 9, 2005) - Two world-traveled speakers spread a "gospel of hope" to the more than 150 people gathered at North Park University last Saturday (April 2) for a conference on justice issues, exhorting them to re-engage in the political process to help fight social ills around the world.

Princess Zulu, an AIDS educator for World Vision, and Bart Campolo spoke to the audience as part of the Bread for World Institute conference. They spoke about more than hunger, however, also focusing on AIDS, poverty and environmental issues, "because we increasingly cannot talk about single issues," said Jennifer Pope, North Park's campus theme coordinator. Princess Zulu

Attendees also participated in workshops, heard from other speakers and watched a video featuring Christian musicians, including Michael W. Smith and Jars of Clay, which encouraged the United States government to pledge one percent of its budget to the United Nation's Millennium Campaign. The campaign has set eight goals to eradicate poverty, hunger and AIDS by 2015.

The conference was coordinated by Adam Phillips, a presidential scholar from North Park Theological Seminary who is doing his internship with Bread for the World. Andrew Freeman, a university student from Berlin, CT, said he attended the conference because, "I've always had a heart for justice."

Zulu, who is from Zambia, carries a royal dignity even though "Princess" is her name, not a title, and preaches with an infectious smile and laughter. That she could be standing before the conference, however, was an "act of God's grace."

After her parents, brother, sister, and many friends died of AIDS, she began going to hospitals to help those who had been diagnosed with the disease. An inward urging encouraged her to get an HIV test herself. Zulu learned she had to get permission from her husband for the test, which he initially refused to grant. He threatened to divorce her if she went against his wishes. That would have meant she would have been left on the street with no means of support.

Eventually she was able to get the test and discovered she was HIV-positive, and later learned that her husband did as well. Despite her diagnosis, Zulu told the audience that, "There is hope in the midst of every situation."

"Hope changes everything," she said. "Hope changes the way you walk. Hope changes the way you look at things."

After learning that she was HIV-positive, Zulu was determined to "be a voice for those who can't speak for themselves." She began speaking about AIDS, and at one point, even pretended to be a prostitute so that when she was picked up by truckers, she could tell them about AIDS.

Her own history, she said, should be a testimonial to what God can do with an individual life. An executive of World Vision International discovered her in her village when he first heard her testimony. As a result, Princess Zulu, 29, became an international spokesperson and AIDS educator for World Vision's Hope Initiative, a campaign to mobilize Christians and the general public to take action against the global HIV/AIDS pandemic. She has traveled to nearly every continent and has even met with President Bush.

"I long for a day when women won't have to get permission from their husband" to learn about AIDS, she said. She added that education must be a priority for women and they must be given equal rights.

"We have to ensure that they get proper training so they can be whatever they dream," she said.

"I refuse to breakdown but (am determined) to break through," Zulu told the applauding crowd. "If I die, I want to leave the legacy behind to speak for those who can't speak for themselves."

Speaking from the first chapter of the Book of James, she reminded listeners that "pure and undefiled religion in the sight of God" is "to care for the widows and the orphans in their distress."

Those widows and orphans include all those who have been forced to live in the streets because of AIDS and poverty. "There are thousands of tsunamis going on around the world every day," Zulu said.

Campolo followed Zulu and told those gathered to put feet to their hope, to use their individual gifts as well as their important "gift of your American citizenship" to benefit the world.

"What does passion for God look like in the street, in the world?" Campolo asked, answering, "It looks really different for different people." He told the story of a plumber, who because of his Christian conviction, provided exemplary service and refused to gouge the poor in contrast to the other plumbers in the poor community where he lives. He also told the story of a friend who is a pianist trained at Julliard who composes pieces that he plays in poor inner-city churches.

"Suddenly you are thinking thoughts you've never thought before. In these places where things seem so broken down, he weaves these beautiful tapestries." He also told of how that the owner of Herr's Potato Chips, a company based in Nottingham, PA, gives away some of his profits to ministries but also hires people at a fair wage, when others don't.

But Campolo he also told the people that they had wrongly given up on using their citizenship to affect the political process. "You can work at a shelter, and you can feed people at a soup kitchen, but with a stroke of a pen, a politician can generate a thousand more homeless people," he said. "We have the ability to convince other people, to get other people to vote the way we want them to vote. This is a tremendous gift. You're supposed to use your gifts to help build the kingdom. But you have the gift of your citizenship to make the world a better place."

Gesturing and sounding like his father, Tony Campolo, he reminded the audience that the primary message of the prophets was spoken to those in power about the way they were mistreating the poor. "They said God has a different vision for a different kind of society."

"The truth of the matter is that most of the people like you are very committed to the needs of the poor but you have completely given up on the political process," he said. "Let's be honest."

He said he understood the cynicism of some, especially because politicians depend on millions of dollars from the wealthy. "They're all raising money from the same people, which means they're all owned by the same people," he said. As a result, "neither the Republicans or the Democrats represent our values very well."

But the people still can change the conscience of the country, which will force the politicians to respond, Campolo said. He told them how Martin Luther King, Jr., asked President Lyndon Johnson to pass a voting rights bill, but Johnson said that he had used all his political capital getting the Civil Rights Act passed.

"(King) went down to Selma and he organized a march and the police beat them up and nearly killed some; they did kill some," Campolo said. When King organized another march two weeks later, the media had taken notice and the country was informed of the injustice. "Within five months a voting rights bill was passed."

"Politicians go the way the wind is blowing," Campolo said, so it was important to change the consciousness of the country. "When people decide they are angry about Janet Jackson, two weeks later Janet Jackson gets dealt with," he said. "People get upset about Janet Jackson, but they don't get upset about the 30,000 people dying of hunger."

Campolo said people must get involved in "the weightier matters of tax policy and the budget." He offered harsh criticism of the budget, saying, "I can't stand our budget" because it benefits the wealthy at the expense of the poor. "I know you don't like this budget any better than I do, and you have a chance to affect the budget," he said.

He challenged everyone to register to vote and write letters saying the government should set aside one percent of its budget to accomplish the Millennium Development Goals. He noted that the United States had committed to seeing the goals become a reality.

In response to the Millennium Development Goals, in March 2002, Bush proposed creating the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA), which is intended to markedly increase the amount of development assistance given to countries already making progress toward the goals. Countries that qualify for the MCA, if they demonstrate good governance practices, will receive development assistance funds.

"We need to do what it takes to keep our promise," Campolo said. "It's a good promise. Who's going to make the leadership do what they say there are going to do?"    

Copyright © 2008 The Evangelical Covenant Church.

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