
Involving Congregations in Advocacy Now (ICAN)
an ELCA guide to developing an advocacy ministry within your congregation
My faith and Advocacy
In this section:
Babies
in the River
An urban legend says:
Once upon a time there was a small village on the edge of a river.
The people there were good and the life in the village was good. One
day a villager noticed a baby floating down the river. The villager
quickly jumped into the river and swam out to save the baby from
drowning.
The next day this same villager was walking along
the river bank and noticed two babies in the river. He called for
help, and both babies were rescued from the swift waters. The
following day four babies were seen floating in the river and
rescued. Then eight babies were rescued, then more, and still more.
The villagers organized themselves quickly, setting
up watch towers and training teams of swimmers who could resist the
swift waters and rescue babies. Rescue squads were soon working 24
hours a day. Each day the number of helpless babies floating down
the river increased.
The villagers organized themselves efficiently. The
rescue squads were now snatching many children each day. Groups were
trained to give mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Others prepared
formula and provided clothing for the chilled babies. Many were
involved in making clothes and knitting blankets. Still others
provided foster homes and placement.
While the babies that were rescued from the river,
now very numerous, could not all be saved, the villagers felt they
were doing well to save as many as they could each day. Indeed, the
village elders blessed them in their good work. Life in the village
continued on that basis.
One day, however, someone raised the question, “But
where are all these babies coming from? Who is throwing them into
the river? Why? Let’s organize a team to go upstream and see who’s
doing it.” The elders countered with: “And if we go upstream who
will operate the rescue operations? We need every concerned person
here.”
“But don’t you see,” cried the one lone voice,
“if we find out who is responsible for throwing them in, we can
stop the problem and no babies will drown. By going upstream we can
eliminate the cause of the problem.”
“It is too risky.”
And so the numbers of babies in the river increased
daily. Those saved increased, but those who drowned increased even
more.
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