Updated 12:19 pm.EST, Mon November 23, 2009

World|Fri, Sep. 26 2008 09:14 AM EDT

Tony Blair Launches Search for 30 Religious Youth 'Ambassadors'

By Eric Young|Christian Post Reporter

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair has launched an international search for 30 religious youth to embark on a 10-month journey of interfaith service for the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals.

  • Blair
    (Photo: AP Images/Leon Neal/Pool/PA Wire)
    In this file photo, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair visits an experimental farm at Pretoria University in Pretoria, South Africa, June 1, 2007.
  • Tony Blair
    (Photo: AP Images / Mary Altaffer)
    Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair speaks during a news conference at the United Nations headquarters ahead of the General Assembly at U.N. Monday, Sept. 22, 2008 at United Nations headquarters. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
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“As changemakers for current and future generations, young people have the opportunity to establish a new vision of inter-religious interaction that places protecting the welfare of the world’s poorest at its center,” Blair stated in an official announcement.

The "Faiths Act Fellows," as the 30 "inter-religious ambassadors," aged 18 to 25, will be called, will be brought together by the Faiths Act Fellowship to first go through a two-month intensive initiative that includes fieldwork with primary health care partners fighting deaths from malaria in Africa.

For the last eight months, the youth will return to their home countries to mobilize young people of faith to raise awareness and resources to promote the Millennium Development Goals. They will particularly focus on fighting deaths from malaria, a disease which Blair emphasizes as an “entirely preventable disease.”

“Halting and reversing the spread of deaths from malaria is one of today’s most urgent moral challenges,” Blair stated.

“And,” he added, “progress in the fight against malaria will speed our achievement of 6 of the 8 Millennium Development Goals,” which include halving extreme poverty, reducing child mortality rates, fighting disease epidemics such as AIDS, and developing a global partnership for development.

According to statistics, 500 million people contract the disease each year and one million die – the vast majority of whom are in Africa and under 5 years old.

But as Blair said Thursday during a panel discussion, malaria is preventable.

“It is preventable and not preventable in the way that we say, for example, climate change is preventable or global economic disorder may be preventable or these things that are of enormous complexity and difficulty,” he said Thursday during the special program in Los Angeles commemorating the day designated by the United Nations as the midway point for achieving the MDGs by 2015.

“It’s preventable in a simple way,” he said, reminding attendees that “we know what works.”

What’s needed, as Blair pointed out, are people of faith to act in compassion, abiding by the golden rule that appears in some shape or form in each of the world’s largest religious movements today.

“Together we can show that Faiths Act,” he stated.

In May 2008, Blair launched the Tony Blair Faith Foundation to promote respect and understanding of and between the major religions and to make the case for faith as a force for good in the modern world.

The foundation is working with Christians, Muslims, Jews, Hindus, Sikhs and Buddhists, and will join with other partners to mobilize faith groups to step up pressure on governments to deliver fully on their MDG commitments on malaria.

Since 189 U.N. member states and at least 23 international organizations adopted the MDGs in 2001, progress towards reaching the eight international development goals by the year 2015 has been uneven. While some countries have achieved many of the targets, others are not on track to realize any.

Blair stated in his announcement that 30 youth that the Faith Acts Fellowship will bring together will in their 10 months of work reach tens of thousands of young people of faith with essential education about the devastating impact of malaria and the ways faiths communities can work together to make a real difference.

“Inspired by their different religious traditions, they will motivate and equip young people in congregations, schools and university religious student groups to lead their faith communities in spreading awareness of the MDG challenge, raising life-saving funds for the fight against deaths from malaria and promoting a new inter-religious dialogue of life and action,” he explained.

The Faiths Act Fellowship is an initiative of the Tony Blair Faith Foundation and is coordinated by Interfaith Youth Core.

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  • Thu Oct 02, 2008 3:56 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Please don't judge our leaders unrighteously,falsely, unwisely and unjustly, you will stand to lose or fall in life, work, family and all relationships

  • Thu Oct 02, 2008 3:49 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Tony Blair's compassion for the poor is unparallel, as brothers sisters in Christ, we must respect, value and thank his character. His weakness lies in being a little hasty in whatever he sets his heart to achieve, sometimes, prematurely that led misunderstanding and he works alone without help from anyone to explain his goodness, his intention and work. He is human and errs like you and I. We should know that in all things if God did not want Blair to prosper or create an anti-Christ(the previous person write in this forum) it will not happen. Blair is my friend when I was with and in the Labour Party. He is handsome, attractive, courageous and compassionate to do good. I constantly thank God for giving Blair, Brown and Bush (3B) to solve global problems to the best of their sacrifices unconditionally and christ-likely. Christians fail to see his good intention to unite different religions of mankind is a wicked tragedy, unkind, ignorant, prejudiced and simplistic and tribal.

    I hope Christians know how to unconditionally and sacrificially love one another. Blair, Brown and Bush love Jesus as they know it.

    What is Kingdom life in Christ like?

    'It is like being a pumpkin.' God picks you from the patch, brings you in, and washes all the dirt off of you.

    Then He cuts off the top and scoops out all the yucky stuff.

    He removes the seeds of doubt, hate, and greed.

    Then He carves you a new smiling face and puts His light inside of you to shine for all the world to see.'

    Dont judge our leaders who do good unrighteously,falsely, unwisely and unjustly, you will stand to lose or fall in life, work and family relationships

    Stay blessed

    Deborah Chong

  • Sat Sep 27, 2008 12:48 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    igh,
    That same thought came across my mind. But, then again, that thought comes to my mind when I think of Obama. I would think of Blair more in conjunction with the beast in revelations 13:11.

  • igh »
    Sat Sep 27, 2008 8:39 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Some think Tony Blair may be the anti-christ.... We will see.

  • Fri Sep 26, 2008 12:45 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Ah, the reverend Tony Blair, vicar of the parish of St Albion, spreading his word now across the globe, what a chalatan, destroyed the reputation of parliament with his goverment, then jetted off to pick up the big bucks. Rememeber Dr David Kelly Mr Blair?, is there blood on your hands?...Well thats me come off the fence then.

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