| WHEN
I WAS VISITING ADRA AUSTRALIA, Gail Ormsby, that office's
director for marketing and public relations,
asked me for an interview. Gail's first question, "Why
did you choose to work for ADRA?" caught me a bit by
surprise. It may have been the jet lag after the long trip
from Baltimore, Maryland, to Australia; but Gail's question
jolted me back to when I first joined the Seventh-day Adventist
workforce in Mount Vernon, Ohio.
The Best-Laid Plans
Fact is, I wanted to be a banker. But 30 years ago every
offer from financial institutions or industry came with
a Sabbath work requirement. So after several discouraging
weeks of pavement-pounding, first to the banks and then
to big businesses, it became clear that my dream of walking
the halls of high finance would come only at a price I
was not willing to pay.
That was when I traded a lifelong dream for eternally lifelong
beliefs.
But what does any of that have to do with Gail's question?
Well, I guess it says that I work for ADRA because of some
very strongly held beliefs that are shared by our faithful
supporters and church members. And because we each build
our foundation on the same rock, I have high hopes that the
combined pragmatic and spiritual roles of ADRA manifest themselves
clearly as we present a ministry to the world that remains
above the fray of the Enron and WorldCom debacles.
I hope
you see that we will not compromise ADRA's manifestation
of Christ's command to help those in need. I hope you know
that every euro, dollar, pound, peso, or yen that is donated
to ADRA will be used as efficiently and effectively as possible.
I hope that the trust placed in ADRA by its supporters is
bolstered by the fact that ADRA voluntarily submitted its
financial and fund-raising practices for evaluation by the
Council of Better Business Bureaus' "wise giving alliance," which
found that ADRA meets all 23 of its stringent standards.
I hope that the results of our annual external audit by
PricewaterhouseCoopers, which are published each year in
our annual report, demonstrate how serious we are about transparency
in our operations. On our Web site, www.adra.org, we also
place our IRS Form 990, which provides a complete financial
picture.
It's worth noting that in a recent study conducted among
other organizations similar to ADRA, the average remuneration
of a CEO or president is as much as three times what ADRA's
president earns. This level of disparity also applies to
other administrative and senior management staff. I raise
this point to highlight the choice that ADRA workers make
in remaining with the agency. As Seventh- day Adventists,
we remain with ADRA because we have committed our lives to
this unique agency and special work.
I hope
that ADRA's supporters know that there is no other single
humanitarian agency whose workers daily serve in more
than 125 countries worldwide, some of which are the most
dangerous and desolate places on this globeÑall for
the single purpose of relieving the suffering of their fellow
human beings.
At Work Around the World
I could not find the house again if I tried. The address
is not listed in any directory. There are no number signs
on the gate. It is completely anonymous. As it should be.
It's a women's refuge.
When we think of ADRA, most of us think of the horrendous
famines in Africa, hurricanes in Central America, earthquakes
in India, or the typhoons in the western Pacific. Or we think
of the child survival programs in Cambodia and the HIV/AIDS
programs in Malawi. Or we recall the microenterprise programs
in Azerbaijan and the education programs in Uganda, or the
street children projects in Brazil. But what about the homeless
in America, the pensioners in Russia, or the battered women
in Australia? ADRA is with them, too.
She had come to the refuge the day before I visited. The
details of her escape from the life that was effectively
killing her are not important. What is important is that
ADRA had a place of refuge, a place of safety.
In a
community not far away, several churches had joined together
and established an ADRA "op shop." In
some countries it would be called a "thrift shop." Open
daily on a busy side street and staffed by volunteers, that
single shop produces the funding, more than $100,000 per
year, to cover the operating cost of the women's refuge.
Even though the local police and social welfare authorities
are the primary referrals for ADRA's refuge, no government
funds are available. ADRA's volunteer "op shop" is
its sole support.
We Christians have no choice but to expend every effort
and provide every available resource to create a place of
safety for hurting children, women, and men, no matter who
they are or where they are or what they believe. To do less
is not an option, for it is what Christ has commanded us
to do.
When I think back to the day I first realized that to accept
a job in high finance would mean compromising everything
I stand for, it's clear that I entered into an unequal trade-off.
In choosing the church, and ADRA, I got much more out of
the deal.
_________________________
Byron L. Scheuneman is senior vice president of Adventist
Development and Relief Agency International.
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