Lausanne World Pulse – Urban Articles – Short-term Student Ministries with Slum Communities
By Glenn Smith
This summer, thousands of university students from the Global North moved into urban slum communities in the Global South to live alongside the poor. (See the statistics in the sidebar.)
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Working Definitions and Facts “Urban poor” defined: Those living on less than $1 USD or $2 USD per day (Millennium Development Agenda). Those living with inadequate income, shelter and access to infrastructure and basic daily services. Those who have an unstable asset base, little to no access to their rights as citizens and are voiceless and powerless in their communities. Number of urban poor: est. 2 billion “Slum community” defined: Communities with inadequate access to safe drinking water and sanitation, poor structural housing, overcrowding and insecure residential status (UN-Habitat). Number of people living in slum |
In February, Rebecca Atallah recounted the ministry she pursues with the garbage villages in Cairo. On a recent visit with her, she shared the marvellous contribution that InterVarsity students make each summer in her city. Teams serve with the children in the Mokattam community and with Sudanese refugees living in Cairo. I thought it would be appropriate to tell their story. In June, Scott Bessenecker wrote about InterVarsity Christian Fellowship’s ministry across the globe in slum communities. (Visit www.urbana.org/feat.trek.home.cfm and his blog for an excellent resource on ministry with the urban poor. Consult the book list below for texts Bessenecker has contributed on our theme.)
This month, a former Canadian student, Julia Smith-Brake, writes about her experience with child-headed households in Kigali. She did an internship as a student in Rwanda.
Over the past nine months we have walked with practitioners into Cap-Haïtien, Phnom Penh, Luanda, Angola, Bhopal and Calcutta, Cairo, Freetown, with Roma communities in Romania, and with the poor in Nordic cultures. We have also seen that poverty is a broad concept. It touches economic, social, physical, and spiritual realities. It affects peoples’ identity and includes social exclusion, absence of harmony in life and well-being, deprivation at every level of life, and one’s ability to participate in the welfare of the community.
However, as Jayakumar Christian points out, the causes of poverty can be traced to “inadequacies in the worldview.” A worldview can be a powerful instrument in perpetuating chronic poverty. All cultures and societies have within their worldview construct aspects of fallenness. And as we have seen, true Christian spirituality cannot be divorced from the struggle for justice and care for the poor and the oppressed. Spiritual formation is about empowering Christians to live their faith in the world. As students work alongside the poor, they learn about inadequacies in their own worldviews and experience incredible personal transformation.
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Worthwhile Books to Consult on Slum Communities
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Glenn Smith is senior associate for urban mission for the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization and is executive director of Christian Direction in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He is a professor of urban theology and missiology at the Institut de théologie pour la Francophonie at the Université de Montréal and at the Université chrétienne du Nord d’Haïti. He is also professor of urban missiology at Bakke Graduate University in Seattle, Washington, USA. |
