Offering Changes Lives in Thailand
Posted By admin on April 7, 2008
By Alison Wingfield, Operative Baptist Fellowship
About $45,000 was collected at the 2005 CBF General Assembly for the first Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Offering, to be shared by the Fellowship and the Baptist World Alliance. The remainder of the CBF portion will be used to fund projects with Fellowship partner churches ministering in areas where religious liberty issues exist. The offering will be collected again at the 2006 General Assembly June 22-23 in
For 5,100 baht, or about $123, a Palaung is able to register for an alien resident card, which offers significant residence rights. “That is a lot of money for most Palaung families,” said Rick Burnette, one of CBF’s Global Missions field personnel. “They make somewhere between a dollar to two dollars a day.”
He and his wife, Ellen, work with various hill tribe people as liaisons with the Palaung and Kachin minority networks, assisting communities in finding ways to make a living, including sustainable agriculture, and dealing with related rights issues.
“This offering has been extremely timely,” Burnette said. “We don’t think it was merely coincidental.”
The Palaung registration fund fit the criteria of the Carter Offering, noted Don Durham, CBF Foundation president and chair of the committee responsible for disbursing the offering funds.
“This is what being the presence of Christ looks like when we engage the grassroots at home with the grassroots around the world,”
Providing direct assistance to those whose religious liberties are endangered or non-existent is a key objective used by the committee to determine where to distribute the funds, said committee member Jimmy Allen, chaplain and senior minister of the chapel of Big Canoe, Ga.
The Palaung registration fund “seemed a good fit for beginning this process,” Allen said. “They need help meeting the high costs placed on them to get the protection of being citizens of
Many of the Palaung and Kachin fled civil unrest in
Using $10,000 of the Carter Offering, along with another $30,000 in donations from churches and individuals, the Burnettes—working with a Christian development project—set up a revolving fund for those eligible to get this documentation.
“It was a different way to help people in a far-away part of the world,” said Amanda Atkin, associate pastor.
Currently, the Thai government has said immigrants are eligible if they came to
“Among the Palaung and Kachin, we have identified 247 persons who are eligible to receive assistance from this fund so as to secure legal registration,” Burnette said.
After determining who is eligible, the group is screened by their communities, and if they are considered in good standing in the community, they can benefit from the fund, and thus obtain legal registration. They are expected to pay back what they have borrowed, with interest, over time, thus creating a sustainable fund.
“This fund eliminates a lot of uncertainty,” Burnette said. Legal registration “gives them rights to reside in
Legal registration provides a first step for the Palaung and Kachin peoples toward realizing the religious liberty guaranteed in the Thai constitution.
The group hopes the Palaung and Kachin peoples will be able to access the sustainable fund for other applications related to land rights and forest rights, Burnette said.
Sources: http://www.baptiststandard.com/postnuke/index.php?module=htmlpages&func=display&pid=4836







Comments
Leave a Reply