While at the Malaria Champions Breakfast in Washington, D.C., I took a few minutes to talk about the challenges we are encountering in the fight against malaria and also some of the successes.
Archive for March, 2010
Challenges and successes in battling malaria
Monday, March 29th, 2010Malaria, faith and justice: a personal account
Wednesday, March 24th, 2010Brittany Peters, World Vision’s ACT:S Fellow, visited Malawi for a summer as part of her academic studies. Below are her reflections on a story she heard from a nurse in Malawi — a story that she will never forget.

Brittany with her sponsored child in Malawi
As I walked through the crowded halls of a village hospital in Malawi, I was overwhelmed by all that I was seeing. People lined the hallways, medicine was scarce, medical professionals were few, and the need was great. In Malawi, a country of 13 million people, there are only about 260 medical doctors.
‘Just wait until malaria season comes’
Louise, the nurse I was with, could see the shock on my face as I took in everything. “If you think this is bad, just wait until malaria season comes,” she said, and proceeded to tell me a story. I don’t remember her exact words, but her message will stay with me forever:
An especially bad week
I will always remember one week at this hospital years ago. There were so many children that week who died of malaria. There are lots of children who die of malaria at this hospital every year, but this week was especially bad. A child came in and looked very sick; I knew she had malaria and did not have long to live.
We were very limited in medication, but I took her in my arms and ran to the doctor to help her. He was not moving very quickly, so I told him to hurry. By the time he came back with the medication, the girl was dead.
I went completely crazy. I felt like I lost my mind. I ran around the hospital, screaming with this dead child in my arms. The hospital staff had to restrain me and take the child away.
I had finally reached my breaking point. Malaria causes too many unnecessary deaths. That child should not have died; no child should die of a disease that is treatable and preventable.
No longer ignorant
I cannot imagine being the mother of a child who died from a preventable, treatable disease. It angers me to think of all the children who die from a disease that we ended in our own country six decades ago. We have the resources to bring malaria under control, but we are not doing all that we can to ensure people have access to the life-saving prevention tools and treatments.
For most of my life, I had no idea that malaria is one of the largest killers of children in the world. I had no understanding of the havoc it wreaks in developing nations, both physically and economically.
Now I know. I can no longer claim ignorance.
A call to action
Consider James 2:14-18 (NIV):
What good is it, my brothers, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save him? Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to him, “Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.
But someone will say, “You have faith; I have deeds.”
Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by what I do.
As Christians, I believe we need to act. As this Scripture illustrates, it is not enough to simply say, “Wow. That is sad! I wish all those people better health in the future.”
We must tangibly meet their physical needs, because we have the resources to do so. You can:
- Donate long-lasting insecticide treated bed nets
- Send a message to your members of Congress urging them to increase our contribution to the fight against malaria,
- Host a Night of Nets event to spread the word about malaria
If our immediate family and friends were all dying of something that was treatable and preventable, wouldn’t we be knocking down every barrier to ensure they received care? We must have this same motivation to respond when it comes to our brothers and sisters around the world.
We, as the Church, must respond.
Your voice makes a difference
Thursday, March 18th, 2010
Last week, 250 “Women of Vision” visited our nation’s Capitol to voice their support for legislation to improve global maternal and child health and combat human trafficking. Grouped by states, these dynamic and vocal constituents met with their members of Congress to ask them to:
- Cosponsor and vote in favor of the Global Child Survival Act (S.1966) and the Newborn, Child and Mother Survival Act (H.R. 1410)
- Cosponsor and vote for the Child Protection Compact Act (H.R. 2737) and companion legislation in the Senate, which has yet to be introduced
At dinner that evening, Bob Zachritz, World Vision’s director of advocacy and government relations, reported back to the full group of women with highlights from the lobby day. With many of the women heading into this experience with a bit of trepidation, they cheered when they heard about the tangible results of their efforts. The highlights includes:
- An Iowa woman successfully persuaded Sen. Harkin to agree to cosponsor both bills.
- The Women of Vision from Connecticut were successful in convincing Congressman Jim Himes to cosponsor the bill. He agreed to approach other members of Congress about supporting both bills.
- The Women of Vision from California were impressed by their meeting with Sen. Boxer’s staff. Sen. Boxer has received many e-mails from other Senate offices asking her to introduce the bill. The Senator wants the bill to be bipartisan, so she is waiting for a Republican cosponsor before introducing the bill in the Senate.
- The Women of Vision from North Carolina met with Sen. Richard Burr who agreed to consider cosponsoring the Child Protection Compact Act. This means that the Child Protection Compact Act could have a Republican supporter. With a Republican cosponsor, the bill could be introduced!
These Women of Vision can proudly acknowledge that they were part of an effort that helped advance and kick-start this critical legislation in the Senate.
Voices — even one voice, your voice — CAN and DOES make a difference in shaping legislative action. And this legislative action can lead to laws that protect vulnerable women and children.
Please consider joining us on April 21-22 in Washington D.C. for an upcoming lobby event. The Action Summit to End Malaria is for everyone who cares about ending malaria once and for all, and is willing to learn how to use their voice to make it happen.
Together, we can make a difference.
Filmmaker Challenge winner goes to Mozambique for malaria video shoot
Thursday, March 4th, 2010by Martin Kittappa
Editor’s Note: In anticipation of The Mobilization to End Poverty, World Vision and Sojourners sponsored the first-ever Filmmaker Challenge. Filmmakers from around the country were invited to create a short video for YouTube that demonstrates “what you can do to end poverty.” The first-prize filmmaker, Martin Kittappa, received a free trip to Africa with World Vision to help film a project with the World Vision staff.
Every time I purchase a new piece of film-making equipment, I usually say a short prayer that God will somehow use what I have bought for his glory. I think as filmmakers we need all the prayer we can get in order to use our skills and our tools to tell God’s story to a generation of people swamped with immoral and amoral media. (Consider how big the American pornographic film industry is — it paid around $8 billion in taxes to the U.S. treasury in 2006, while Hollywood paid around $2 billion.)
When my film ‘The Importance of Flossing’ won the Sojourners and World Vision-sponsored filmmaker competition for the Mobilization to End Poverty, that seemed to me to be a great opportunity to speak of God’s heart to the world’s poorest and most oppressed people.
At the beginning of September, I met up with Tom, Margaret, and Andrea from the World Vision media unit at the Atlanta airport. We boarded our long flight to Mozambique where, in the north of the country in some of the most remote communities, we were to shoot a film about the problems and issues surrounding malaria. Although this was a prize for winning the competition, I treated this like any other commercial project I would have been hired to work on, bringing nine years of location sound mixing experience. (The joke became that I had entered a competition, but Tom actually won a sound a mixer for his project.) This seemed like the kind of thing that would honor all those prayers over the film gadgets and gizmos I have been acquiring over time.
We traveled along roads only accessible in 4×4 vehicles to villages where communities had been devastated by malaria. Children tend to be hit especially hard, as they don’t always take the precautions to prevent the disease when they are at play. We interviewed a woman who lost her preteen son to the disease, and another woman who lost her husband and five children to the scourge of malaria.
Malaria has a high mortality rate, but even those who don’t die cannot work whilst they are suffering. The social and economic consequences of the disease hinder the ability of these communities to develop and improve.
The sad thing we learned is that it is an easily controllable disease if only the investment could be made. Prevention is relatively simple — an inexpensive mosquito net will stop an infected mosquito from biting a sleeping person. Safe, cheap insecticides and easily accessible medication would almost eradicate this disease if only the will was there to make it happen.
We interviewed a local doctor who told us of his frustrations: all too often the medication would run out, so when infected people walk for six hours to come to his clinic for treatment, he has nothing to give them. We interviewed the family of a little girl in his clinic who was suffering with malaria. Later, we heard that she died two days after we saw her.
But in spite of all the problems, there is hope. We filmed local activists who traveled through the villages using music and drama to teach people how to prevent malaria and how to recognize the symptoms early so they can seek treatment right away. World Vision is actively running a campaign to make sure every person has a mosquito net and knows how to use it. Water pumps are slowly being installed.
It will take a lot of work and dedication to put an end to this affliction. We have managed to all but eradicate this disease in the Western world; there is no real reason why this cannot be achieved in Africa. I can only hope that the film we made will be a call to action.
You can see pictures of my trip on my Facebook page.
Martin Kittappa has been working in the film business for nine years. His passion is to make powerful films that will give a voice to people in this world who don’t have one due to injustice and poverty. He now lives in Pasadena, California, with his wife, Iihae.

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