
A young girl works in the fields in southern Sudan – the MDGs argue
she should be at school.
Credits: Karen Kasmauski for CRS
“I told the governments that they have to keep the promises they
made ten years ago. It’s not only their duty to the poor, it’s
important for humanity,” said Fr Ambroise Tine, Secretary General
of Caritas Senegal. “I can see in my own country why the
Millennium Development Goals are so important. In Senegal, we
have so many children whose parents are too poor to feed them,
too poor to send them to school and too poor to take them to the
doctor. This is not right.”
Fr Tine got the message across when, representing all 165
members of Caritas, he addressed September ’s special MDGs
progress summit at the UN in New York. “I explained that more aid
better spent, debt cancellation and fair trade are all essential if we
are to meet the MDGs targets in just five years time.”
The eight Millennium Development Goals represent the basic
human dignities which everyone of us should have. They seek to
reduce hunger and poverty in Senegal and everywhere else in the
world. Caritas members are working hard towards the targets.
Backing up their work on the ground with advocacy, Caritas
Internationalis launched its web-based campaign "Voices Against
Poverty" in Australia in September. It gave supporters worldwide
advocacy materials focused on every MDG, including an email
postcard campaign, a quiz and an interactive MDG village which
showed Caritas’s work towards each target.
The campaign was readily picked up, with many Caritas
members featuring it prominently on their websites. Caritas Spain
distributed advocacy materials electronically to every one of the
country’s 68 dioceses. In Valencia, the diocesan magazine
explained the MDGs campaign to every parish and the village of
Mas de las Matas in Teruel took it up in a prayer campaign.