A group of faith leaders from all 50
states is urging the Senate to bolster its next pandemic relief bill with a
multibillion-dollar investment in the global response to the coronavirus — a
call they connect to “the enduring values of our country.”In an open letter to senators, co-authored
by Christian musician Michael W. Smith and shared with The
Associated Press ahead of its circulation, the 51 faith leaders also
grounded their support for spending on global pandemic response in the moral
codes of their religions.
“In the religious creeds we represent —
and in the shared creed of our country — all human beings are created equal and
endowed with certain rights,” the letter states. “Even at a time of crisis for
our country, this belief in universal human rights and dignity remains an
imperative.”
The letter was spearheaded by the ONE
Campaign, an international humanitarian advocacy group, with assistance
from four faith-based international aid nonprofits: Blood:Water, Bread
for the World, Compassion International and World
Vision. Clergy from Christian denominations as well as Jewish rabbis have
signed on so far.
Tom Hart, ONE’s North America executive
director, said religious leaders have played central roles in aiding previous
campaigns to combat disease on a global scale, including international
responses to the AIDS crisis and malaria.
“The faith community has come to this from
a perspective of what’s right to do, as well as a deep well of experience,”
Hart said.
An estimated 0.1% of emergency pandemic
response spending approved so far by Congress has gone toward international
relief, according to the Brookings Institution think tank. The
$3 trillion coronavirus response legislation passed in May by the
Democratic-controlled House of Representatives included no new funding for the
global response to the pandemic, which has been blamed for more than 120,000
deaths in the U.S.
Worldwide, the coronavirus is linked to
more than 480,000 deaths and 9.4 million confirmed infections, according to a
count maintained by Johns Hopkins University.
It’s not yet clear how the GOP-controlled
Senate would treat spending on global response in its next pandemic relief
bill, which could be released as soon as next month.
In anticipation of that legislation, the
letter from faith leaders stressed the importance of a successful worldwide
effort.
“There is simply no way to defeat this
pandemic until it is effectively confronted in developing nations,” it read,
adding that a “robust, multibillion-dollar global” proposal would provide
“direct and immediate benefit for the American people, while honoring the
belief that all men and women are created in God’s image.”